Keep belief in its place
GODLESS WORLD / Personal morality must not be turned into public policy
Krishna Rau / National / Monday, March 02, 2009
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The Catholic church in the US is up in arms about the possible passage of the Freedom of Choice Act, warning that its passage would mean the end of civilization as we know it.

The act would ensure that government is unable to limit abortions performed before viability.

The only problem with the church's apocalyptic campaign: there is no such bill. Such a bill has been introduced in the past, but never made it out of committee. There is now no such bill before Congress, yet according to Time magazine, in November, the annual general meeting of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops voted unanimously "'to mobilize the resources of the USCCB, dioceses and the entire Catholic community' to oppose the Freedom of Choice Act. A chain email of unknown origin soon began making its way into Catholic inboxes, warning of an imminent threat to the anti-abortion cause. 'For those of you who do not know,' it read, 'the Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA) is set to be signed if Congress passes it on January 21-22 of 2009. The FOCA is the next sick chapter in the book of abortion.'"

Is it surprising that the church would make up a bill in order to mobilize anti-abortion support? It shouldn't be. This is the way churches and religions have traditionally operated, creating straw men to build up panic then tearing them down.

Remember the campaign churches, mosques and synagogues waged against including sexual orientation in Canadian hate crimes law? That would be when the religious right warned that such inclusion would mean constant prosecution of churches for preaching the Bible during masses and the end of religion as we know it. The campaign whipped up all sorts of homophobic hatred. The result, of course, has been a complete lack of hate crimes prosecutions of churches. Preachers, rabbis and imams are as free as ever to rant against homosexuality.

That's the freedom they used to full advantage during the campaign against same-sex marriage, as did Stephen Harper. Remember that campaign? That would be when they warned that allowing same-sex marriage would mean the end of traditional marriages, would mean churches would be forced to marry gays and, of course, would mean prison for any priest who refused to perform such marriages.

What happened? No church has been forced to perform a same-sex marriage, no priests have been arrested and, surprise, the world hasn't ended.

Religions love to stir up panic in the public — even if they have to create it all themselves — and then use the frenzy to drum up hatred against their enemies. And when those churches see their power slowly eroding, as is the case these days, those imaginary campaigns get ever more vicious.

***

Now, having said that, it will no doubt come as something of a surprise to the religious right — members of whom, to my shocked pleasure, apparently read this column and website — that I have some sympathy for them. Not on questions of inclusion in hate crimes legislation or same-sex marriage, but on questions of free speech and the misuse of human rights codes and provincial and federal human rights commissions.

Catholic Insight, a virulently homophobic publication based in Toronto, has been the subject of several human rights complaints based on their writings about gays and lesbians. Their response has included the claim that there's a double standard at play.

In their February issue, editor Alphose de Valk writes, "The government should also keep in mind that persons of our faith persuasion are regularly subjected to vilification and criticism from the very segment of the population that launched human rights and other actions against us. The leading Canadian homosexual magazine Xtra!, for example, has regularly published a column called 'Godless World,' which, as the name implies, focuses on expunging any vestiges of religious faith from the public sphere. Never has this publication, nor the composer of the column in question, been subject to a human rights commission investigation."

Now I must quibble with the logic here. I don't think the fact that I've never faced a human rights complaint for this column is grounds for invalidating the whole system of human rights commissions. But the fact is I do think such commissions have been forced to deal with complaints they shouldn't be dealing with and have been used to restrict free speech.

The prime example concerns the complaints filed, and eventually dropped, against Mark Steyn for his writing about Islam. Steyn's piece was inaccurate, poorly written and almost juvenile in its anti-Muslim ranting. But rather than let Steyn slip into a well-deserved obscurity, the complaints earned him notoriety and a place as a poster boy for free speech that he doesn't merit.

That's not what I want to see. I want to see people like Steyn and de Valk free to publish because I think public exposure is the best way to ensure their garbage is subjected to the ridicule it deserves.

And if I'm willing to put up with them, then they're going to have put up with little ol' me as well. And my ongoing attempts at "expunging any vestiges of religious faith from the public sphere."

As a private organization, the Catholic church and Catholic Insight are free to say and believe whatever they want, as far as I'm concerned.

De Valk is right. I do want to eliminate religion from the public sphere. I believe in the separation of church and state. But I'm not calling for its elimination from private places of worship or from people's homes or personal beliefs.

This places me in contrast to the Catholic church, which not only wants to eliminate homosexuality from the public sphere but wants it eliminated from bedrooms, from films and books and from hearts and minds.

Fortunately, as is becoming ever clearer, history will not be on the side of the church.



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Reader Comments


 
Splash
You or, if not you, then your headline writer said, "Personal morality must not be turned into public policy." This supposition is a tenet of your morality that you are attempting to maintain as public policy.
Kralizec, Arrakeen Arrakis
03/03/09 2:01 AM EST
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Mark Steyn and You
I love Mark Steyn and you can't hold a candle to him. You are really sick.
Joan Sands, Bluffton, SC, USA USA
03/03/09 11:41 AM EST
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One belief or another
Why should anyone go along with your belief that beliefs shouldn't be legislated? Is it immoral to legislate morality? O well, demographic forces will ensure that history will NOT be kind to your views. Whether it's Muslims, Catholics, or conservative Protestant Christians, the future belongs to those who show up, i.e. reproduce (a difficult go in a homosexual relationship) and teach their offspring what they believe. Just think of it as survival of the fittest. Evolution in action. Last man standing.
Doc, Louisa KY
03/03/09 12:46 PM EST
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shadow boxing
Mr. Rau, You will find that Steyn readers, more than most will defend your right to free speech, even your somewhat pompous dismissal of a much better and more successful writer. However, you appear to share a blind spot with what Ezra Levant calls "the official Jews" as to where the greatest threat to your desire to separate church and state and push for gay rights lies. Keep swinging away at Catholics and Christians in general but their only threat in the United States is to gay marriage and in Canada, not even that, basically just withholding total societal approval for the extremes of gay activism. Meanwhile, a more existential threat to you appears that is the camel in the room, so to speak and yet you studiously ignore it and even ridicule Steyn for addressing it. Your much loved separation of church and state which evolved in all nations with Euro-Christian origins or their former colonies (coincidence?) will be hard pressed to continue anywhere that Muslims gain influence as they recognize no such thing where they dominate. Sharia becomes the law of the land and it has no truck with gays (who don't even exist in Muslim countries as no less an authority than Iranian president Ahmedinejad insists). If you don't believe Steyn, read your fellow gay journalist Bruce Bawer re his European experience on what happens to gays when a liberal western democracy is colonized by a sufficient number of believers in Islam. Until then, your rant against Steyn and Catholics is juvenile bravado against teddy bears compared to the monster in the closet you have recently vacated, waiting to devour you.
Tarkus, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 3:06 PM EST
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A response to Shadow Boxing
Tarkus: What is the best reponse to any religious majority that threatens a despised minority? a) Enshrine religious authority in the apparatus of the state OR b) Ensure strong separation between church and state? Whether our future persecutors will be christian or muslim is less certain than the likelihood that our future persecutors will be religiously motivated. I think it is in everyone's best interests to ensure a thoroughly secular public square. It protects religious minorities as much as it protects the LGBT community. Tarkus - drop your hatred of the "other" and work towards building a secular, tolerant and open society.
GaySolomon, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 5:52 PM EST
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Or, instead of that...
Or, GS, why not continue to promote what you term as 'hatred of other'? If one is part of the strongest identity grouping (whether 'religious' or otherwise), and it feels good to hate the other, why not? Not that there's anything wrong with that, is there? I mean, after all, that whole 'right and wrong' thing is sooo religious, after all, and we can't have any religious stuff in our laws, now, can we. And accusing someone of 'hating', that's pretty hateful, isn't it? And offensive. Oughta be a law.
Doc, Louisa KY
03/03/09 6:14 PM EST
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In Doc's own words
Doc writes: "Why not continue to promote hatred of other?" Please continue to exercise your right to free speech. Nothing more eloquently condemns you than your own words.
GaySolomon, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 6:20 PM EST
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One is not the same
Gay Solomon, you miss the point. You are in a Christian dominated society now. They are the only ones who have permitted/evolved the traditions leading to separation of church and state in every nation they founded, no mere coincidence. Yes, their influence is now waning but what comes after will not be nearly as friendly toward you or other minorities as you imagine. In fact, Christians themselves will become a minority whose persecution has already started by the misnamed Human Rights Commissions. For a while, our society will run on the fumes of what went before but something will fill the vacuum other than what you picture, continued separation of church and state with all minorities somehow magically accommodating each other without a unifying leadership despite strongly opposing viewpoints on the advisability of even separating church/mosque and state, gay and women's rights, sexual liberty, abortion, freedom of speech and thought to name only a few. You have benefited from the Christian ethic which overall is "live and let live" despite the constant leftist misrepresentation of the whole by the most intolerant few. If all gays were judged by the most promiscuous irresponsible ones, you would be resentful yet you think nothing of slagging all Christians on the basis of a minority view. If you're young enough, (and calling oneself a Solomon usually connotes the arrogance of youth) you will come to regret your naive or ingenuous equating of Christian and Islamic dominance of society. Trying to make me out to be a hater for pointing out that they are different with one better than the other for your purposes is just foolish. Look at every Christian founded nation versus every Muslim founded nation on the planet. Compare and contrast on treatment of gays if nothing else concerns you. This isn't brain surgery. Recognizing an "other" who has it in for you isn't gratuitous hatred, it's adaptive. Conv
Tarkus, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 8:43 PM EST
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To finish a thought
Conversely, embracing him (an Other who is actually existentially dangerous instead of merely disapproving of your way of life) or even confusing the two through ignorance or inflexible leftist ideology is suicidal.
Tarkus, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 8:51 PM EST
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a secular public realm protects all
I'm a little surprised to see that religious right wing Americans read xtra.ca, mind you it does seem that there's a lot of evangelicals in the US's bible belt that can't stop thinking about gay men, I know how they feel but I'm much nicer about it. Anyways all of our freedoms can only be guaranteed in a fully secular public realm, religious beliefs are fine but must never be forced upon anyone else especially by our government, only a fully secular government can guarantee that we will be able to live our own lives to the best of our ability in the way that makes us happiest. No one should be forced to act as if they shared a certain religious belief upon penalty of law, its a disgrace and I would think insulting to a deity, to have people forced to pretend they're worshipers upon penalty of law, if I were a deity I'd find that insulting anyways. My point being when everyone's rights and freedoms are protected we all win, whether we're religious or not. Doc - "queers" come from hetero women in the vast majority of cases, I'm sure some lesbians have children who are sexual minorities too but the vast majority of us come from heteros, the more heteros, the more of us queers, we're never going away, ever.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 9:11 PM EST
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Takus - finish your thought
Tarkus - You have not answered my questions. As for your opinions regarding the evils of islam and the merciful bounty of christianity, I would suggest you to look more closely at the historical recod (e.g. Inquisition, Conquests, Crusades, Holocaust, Iraq War etc...). If I understand you correctly, "the monster in the closet" is islam. If a strong secular state is not the answer to your "=iIslamic" threat, then what is the answer? How ought we to respond? Should we persecute them? Should we deny them entry to our pure christian land? Tell us Tarkus - what is your answer? Finish your thought.
GaySolomon, Tornoto Ontario
03/03/09 9:45 PM EST
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enemy of my enemy
I'm a gay man but I actually found my way here via Steyn's site. I like him, principally because we share a common enemy - people what would like to stone me to death. I would have thought that sites like this share a common cause with Steyn. Maybe I'm missing something obvious.
James, Sydney Australia
03/03/09 9:57 PM EST
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Steyn: homo-loving son of a gun
You shouldn’t be so hasty in condemning Steyn- he is, paradoxically, a greater ally of the gay community than many would realise. If you bothered to read America Alone, you’d see the many examples he gives of a concerning trend in the “treatment” of gays- not in Islamic countries, but here in the West, in places with growing Muslim populations. (Do you think these examples are also “inaccurate, poorly written, and almost juvenile”??). It would appear that the call for the “extermination of homosexuals” being openly preached in the mosques of many Western cities would be a major retrograde step for the gay movement- one that would take us a bit further back than say, the pre-Harvey Milk days. With a substantial number of British Muslims agitating for the introduction of Shariah as a parallel system of law, we can only hope there is a revision of their “sodomy laws” (penalty= execution). This march was held in London last week: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_vR5moPjJ0&feature=related. (Go to 10 minutes to see camera pan back- large numbers attended. By their own admission, these men would chop your head off without thinking twice. I say men, because women were told they could attend under strict “segregation” rules- at the very back of the group). Mark Steyn may not see himself as such, but in alerting us of the threat posed by Islamisation, with its attendant non-separation of mosque and state, he is in fact a more courageous champion of “equal rights” for gays than Sean Penn. It’s not easy to find many “Commie, homo-loving sons-of-guns” (Penn’s words during his Oscar acceptance speech) who have shown the guts to confront the real threat that is looming- not just for gays, but for modern society in general. Anjem Choudray (organizer of the UK Shariah march) is your enemy- not Steyn.
Kate, Vancouver BC
03/03/09 11:03 PM EST
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social engineering backfire coming
[- "queers" come from hetero women in the vast majority of cases, I'm sure some lesbians have children who are sexual minorities too but the vast majority of us come from heteros, the more heteros, the more of us queers, we're never going away, ever.] Well, the first part is true. The second part is true only until scientists discover the gay gene or genes, likely in our lifetime. Then women will eventually be offered selective abortion as they are now for various other conditions they do not wish their children to have. Gays and feminists will presumably be parting ways at that point since both have up to now wholeheartedly supported a woman's right to choose whether to give birth at all and to whom even in the case of babies with no problems that can be detected pre-birth. Sorry, but few women (not even all lesbians) will choose to bear gay children who will be different from over 97% of the population with all the burdens that entails even in the most tolerant society for what will be a shrinking minority. Kids want to fit in and their mothers' desire to protect their offspring will outweigh their political leanings. This is a mere evidence based prediction, not an expression of what is desirable, but then, I think too many abortions are carried out for frivolous reasons. Will you continue to support unconditional abortion when they select against gay fetuses the way certain cultures select against the female gender in many cases now? Christians at least unlike your beloved secularists would tend towards allowing you to be born...
Tarkus, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 11:05 PM EST
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Figure it out yourself
Gay Solomon, the onus is rather on you to demonstrate that your secular state can withstand Muslim pressure to institute sharia wherever they emigrate as Christianity beat back three Islamic onslaughts centuries ago up to the very Gates of Vienna. Your mishmash of historic to current events does not as you seem to think prove some kind of moral equivalence between Christianity which reformed and evolved and Islam which has stayed stock still for 14 centuries. The Crusades were a delayed defensive counter-attack to take back Christian lands overrun by Islamic armies. Yes there was barbarity on both sides but that's the nature of war and the war was started by Islamic expansion. In modern Iraq as around the world, the salient point is that most Muslim civilians are killed by other Muslims. I know that will be astounding news to a lefty. Sharia creep has commenced in every Western country with significant Muslim immigration with a thousand examples easily assembled, one involving Steyn. It is enabled by shortsighted leftist ideology that has only its love for totalitarianism in common with Islamists who are funding the world wide expansion of what is inconveniently a supremacist religion/ideology. Islam is not a mere religion that will share space equally with other religions and atheists wherever it comes to control the political landscape. Again, this isn't speculation. There is not a single Muslim nation of 57 where non-Muslims receive equal treatment before the law. But I waste my breath because you have been afraid or too lazy to look at the new threat on the block and arm yourself with knowledge. I have neither the space nor time to do it. Read Bruce Bawer's book While Europe Slept and/or check out his website http://www.brucebawer.com/since he started out like you, a naive gay man believing the worst about North America and Christianity and smartening up considerably since living in Europe with his partner (recently beaten up in Norway).
Tarkus, Toronto Ontario
03/03/09 11:49 PM EST
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Tarkus refuses to answer
Your refusal to answer how we should respond to muslims is telling. Are you ashamed to even voice your answer under the cloak of anonymity?
GaySolomon, Toronto Ontario
03/04/09 9:03 AM EST
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Get real!
"Tarkus" wrote: "[- "queers" come from hetero women in the vast majority of cases, I'm sure some lesbians have children who are sexual minorities too but the vast majority of us come from heteros, the more heteros, the more of us queers, we're never going away, ever.] Well, the first part is true. The second part is true only until scientists discover the gay gene or genes, likely in our lifetime." "Tarkus", if you *genuinely* believe that, you are apparently as ill-informed and ignorant about genetics as you are about both queers and Muslims, not to mention modern multicultural Canadian society, progressive thought, and simple human decency. Please take your "dittohead" babblings somewhere else.
Nathanial, Slocan Valley BC
03/05/09 4:28 PM EST
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equality for all only guarantee
Equality for all people regardless of whatever including religion is the only way to guarantee equality for sexual minorities too. While I'm an atheist against religious beliefs in politics or any public policy does not mean I'm against any religion, including Muslims, just the imposition of one's religious beliefs on others. I do believe that we all suffer when one among us is discriminated against or considered less worthy, or less human or whatever by our society. Marginalizing and/or attacking any group like Steyn does Muslims does not help social equality for sexual minorities in any way since it pushes the notion that some groups are not worthy of social equality, a dangerous sentiment that could turn against sexual minorities in future generations. Only by pushing back with the notion that all are equal and worthy of respect do we hope to retain our rights and freedoms for future generations.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
03/06/09 1:54 AM EST
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My Experience in the Queer Community
What about the HRC sut against Bishop Henry? There is all kinds of abuse of Catholicism these days. My experience is here: www.gaytestimony.com
David, Ottawa ON
03/08/09 5:24 PM EST
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What about Fred Henry?
David, As you well know, Fred Henry's "pastoral" letter was a viscious attack against the LGBT community. IMHO it was anything but "pastoral" in its call for using the full "coercive power of the state" against the LGBT community. It was a shameful tirade against a vulernable minority. I wonder how you or Fred would feel if Catholics were a small despised minority, and a dominant majority called upon the state to use coercive force to stop Catholics from attending mass. I suspect there would be a great hue and cry - one that many of us in the LGBT community would rally around to protect your right to worship in private. Ultimately, the complaint against Fred Henry was dropped by the Plaintif. As far as I can see, the HRC process worked. Sorry - but the Catholic Church does not get to visciously attack a minority (in a way that it would never tolerate), and then when some small individual lashes out against the attack, the RCC slyly claims that it is a victim. Give me a break. You guys are too much!
GaySolomon, Toronto Ontario
03/10/09 3:26 PM EST
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