Mitt Romney's speech
Dec. 6th, 2007 01:04 pmThis is my first reaction to reports about Mr. Romney's Mormonism for the Christian Right speech. I have not read a full transcript, nor have I heard the speech.
Having disclaimed that, this quote is disturbing. Perhaps context will make it less so, but it's three words. How much parsing can there be?
Freedom requires religion?!?
The hell?
When I was a believer, I never thought atheists or agnostics had fewer freedoms or rights to freedom.
As a non-believer (or uncertain of belief-er), I fear my freedom being linked to any idea of God.
Religion is personal. That was the point of my ancestors coming here.
Freedom is social. There's no point in guaranteeing it, if the guarantee doesn't apply to all.
Having disclaimed that, this quote is disturbing. Perhaps context will make it less so, but it's three words. How much parsing can there be?
Freedom requires religion?!?
The hell?
When I was a believer, I never thought atheists or agnostics had fewer freedoms or rights to freedom.
As a non-believer (or uncertain of belief-er), I fear my freedom being linked to any idea of God.
Religion is personal. That was the point of my ancestors coming here.
Freedom is social. There's no point in guaranteeing it, if the guarantee doesn't apply to all.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 07:29 pm (UTC)Over the years I have explored religion. I have read significant swathes of the Bible and a few other religious texts for various belief systems. I have talked to members of various faiths about their faith. And in the end, I find myself an entirely respectful non-believer. I understand a lot of what a lot of different people believe and I make no attempt whatsoever to sway them from their religious tenents. I do not deliberately offend against people's beliefs, and if I find I have inadvertantly done so, I apologize sincerely. If I am in a situation that includes a religious act (weddings, funerals, a dinner where someone chooses to say Grace aloud), I accept that this is what they believe and behave myself.
All I ask is that others be as respectful of my failure to believe as I am of their choice to believe.
If we do not have freedom of choice when it comes to our most personal beliefs, what freedom can we possibly have?
And in conclusion: fuck you, Mitt Romney. I do not need a god to be a moral person. I do not need a god to be politically free. I certainly do not need you to lead my country.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 07:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 08:00 pm (UTC)of religion among the other choices (assembly, press, the usual)? That would make more sense, not that he necessarily was trying to make sense as much as
bring Christian evangelicals over to his side.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 08:26 pm (UTC)WTF???
Why can't we all live together and have a bit of tolerance. Do they not see the correlation between the way they think and the way the people think who are trying to wipe them off the face of the earth?
When they talk about religion, unfortunately I don't think they're talking about Paganism, or Islam :o(
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 08:40 pm (UTC)His invocation of the Founding Fathers was intriguing. But I read Sam Adams statement as a validation of Faith rather than a validation of religion.
I hope I'm missing something.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 09:07 pm (UTC)I'd love to get your take.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 09:12 pm (UTC)"I believe that every faith I have encountered draws its adherents closer to God. And in every faith I have come to know, there are features I wish were in my own: I love the profound ceremony of the Catholic Mass, the approachability of God in the prayers of the Evangelicals, the tenderness of spirit among the Pentecostals, the confident independence of the Lutherans, the ancient traditions of the Jews, unchanged through the ages, and the commitment to frequent prayer of the Muslims. As I travel across the country and see our towns and cities, I am always moved by the many houses of worship with their steeples, all pointing to heaven, reminding us of the source of life's blessings."
Now that's all well and good, but it's definitely exclusionary of those without belief in a higher power. Or whose belief system incorporates other features such as Buddhism.
I've had more than a few disagreements with Mr. Romney's politics in the past. As governor of Massachusetts he wanted to invoke the old anti-miscegnation laws to prevent gay marriage even after the State Supreme Court had made its ruling, for instance. So, my vote was never his to lose.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 09:14 pm (UTC)Miss you, Twistie.
Now Go -- Beta. *G*
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 09:52 pm (UTC)The spiritual attachment fundamentalists have to Israel stems from the need of the Jewish people to all be there, so that they can be converted to the one true faith, and only when that happens will the Second Coming happen.
I may have got that all wrong, but that was my understanding.
That's why even though this *sounds* inclusive, there's no way it can be, even of the other monotheistic faiths let alone any others (and I'm counting lack of religious faith as a faith here). If it was, it would be denying one of the main principles of his own.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 10:29 pm (UTC)I always feel that way regarding religion.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-06 11:09 pm (UTC)The Mormon heaven is also supposed to be advanced training for the next stage in spiritual development, which is why the Mormons would rather go there than settle for just an amazingly nice heaven with their non-Mormon buddies. It'd be like staying a perpetual teenager - possibly comforting, but underachieving.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-07 01:18 am (UTC)Second, as with you, my vote was never his to lose, and for at least some of the same reasons.
Third, maybe I'm missing something, but it seems disgraceful to me that he was pressured to make a speech on his religion at all. Yes, I know that if your religion means much to you, it is likely to have some sort of influence on what you do in office, even if you set boundaries beyond which you won't let that influence go, as John F. Kennedy claimed to do. Still, it's the policies and public actions that I care about, not whether they arose from Mormonism, Islam, atheism, or the worship of dog hair.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-07 03:11 am (UTC)I think the man is honorable, and leaving the governor's mansion before starting his campaign is a mark of that.
I too am appalled that the Republican Party seems to require a religious litmus test. I'm sorry he felt he had to speak on the subject, but I understand why, within his party, it was necessary.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-07 03:20 am (UTC)The middle heaven reminds me of my Jehovah's Witness ladies explaining that very few people are fit for the perfection of heaven, so God will give us Paradise here on earth. It was agreed that she'd grow all the vegetables she wanted and I'd cook them. *G*
And you're right, the Republican religious arbiters are probably more suspicious of Mormonism lacking Jesus as the "one way to salvation."
no subject
Date: 2007-12-07 07:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-12-07 02:04 pm (UTC)I bet that I, too, would be called on--nearly coerced--to make a speech about religion if I were running for a major office. Like Romney's, my "faith," which is mostly the absence of faith, is a target for demagoguery, a morsel for the pseudoreligious mouthpieces. I'd hope that my speech would help promote our better values, but I'm sure that the demagogues would choke loudly on the morsel.