Tim Rutten writes a weekly column for the Los Angeles Times
called "Regarding Media." We have reported on his pervasive
anti-conservative bias in several past posts, including
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here.
Today's column (Sat. Jan. 13, 2007) addresses issues surrounding
Gov. Mitt Romney's Mormonism. While the overall motive of the article
may be well taken, Rutten presents a seriously faulty view within his
piece. Rutten asserts that America's "social sanity" and "sensible
accommodation" have been "undermined" by the "demands of social
conservatives." Begins Rutten,
THE Yiddish writer Sholem Aleichem once remarked that in the
Jewish hamlets of his native Ukraine there were only two people who
really were serious about God. One was the local rabbi and the other
was the village atheist ... (snip) ...
[W]e all get along fairly well because most people behave pretty
much like the residents of Aleichem's shtetl, neither aflame with
religious certainty nor insistent on unbelief.
This tacit arrangement is a deep expression of social sanity and
makes possible not only the separation of church and state in a
nation where faith flourishes, but also the unparalleled flowering
of every sort of religious institution — devotional, educational and
charitable — that is one of American culture's unique achievements.
Increasingly, though, this sensible accommodation is being
undermined. It began with the demands by social conservatives —
mainly evangelical Protestants and right-wing Catholics — that
candidates for office and public officials make ritual obeisance to
expressions of religious faith and conform themselves to a checklist
of approved positions on issues ranging from abortion to capital
punishment.
Rutten, again, is totally erroneous in his view. His premise is
entirely backwards. Any "sensible accommodation" in this country has
been upended by the relentless activism from social liberals,
not from conservatives. For the past several years, an aggressive
secular-progressive ideology, largely supported by liberals, has sought
to reconstruct the traditional American cultural and social landscape.
To illustrate this, let me ask:
Which ideology began being "insistent" that an unborn human can
legally be exterminated at any point, and for any reason, through
all nine months of pregnancy?
Which ideology seeks to remove "under God" from the Pledge of
Allegiance and "In God We Trust" from our coins? (BTW, "In God We
Trust" made its first appearance on U.S. currency in 1864,
during the Civil War (source).
"Under God" was added to the Pledge over 50 years ago, in 1954. (In
July 2006, House Republicans overwhelmingly voted in favor of
the "Pledge Protection Act" (H.R.
2389). House Democrats voted overwhelmingly against it. (Dems
voted 'nay' 158-39. Reps voted 'yea' 221-8.)))
Which ideology has been so "insistent" on the legalization of gay
"marriage"?
Which ideology is behind the wish to remove decades-old monuments
from public viewing? (this)
Which ideology is behind the desire to remove a tiny cross from the
48-year-old Los Angeles County seal? (this)
Which ideology is responsible for providing legal defense to an
organization whose stated mission is to oppose age-of-consent laws
that make sex with children a crime? (We're talking about
this.)
The "demands by social conservatives" stem not from a desire for some
"ritual obeisance to expressions of religious faith." Rather,
conservatives are responding to the uncompromising activism of
progressive liberals who have sought to convert American culture. Not
long ago, unrestricted abortion, gay "marriage," and the removal of
Christmas nativity scenes were unheard of in this country. And the above
examples are just the tip of the iceberg.
The bottom line: Rutten, driven by an anti-conservative bias, has it
backwards. Social conservatives have not "undermined" "social sanity"
and any "sensible accommodation." Secular-progressive liberals have, and
the evidence shows it!