The Political Incorrectness of Political Correctness

SLM

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I'm not sure it was "devised" in the first place.

Oh I'm pretty sure it was devised. Tact and manners are not new, why would we need new terminology?


It is unfortunate that the anti-PC crowd will be led by the worst of their kind, cursing "victims" whilst whining about their victimhood.
I don't necessarily agree with all the views expressed in the OpEd piece but there are some salient points made though. I've been, or seen others, interrupted enough in order to have their terminology 'corrected' when what was being expressed, and how, was not needing of correction (let alone being interrupted to do so) that I'd have to agree that in at least a great many situations it has become a wet blanket that stifles open discourse.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Oh I'm pretty sure it was devised. Tact and manners are not new, why would we need new terminology?
It's hard to figure out exactly what the origin of the term was. Was it lefties dragooning speech, or righties whining about people objecting to their hate speech? Either way, whilst tact and manners are indeed not new, nor are violations, often gleeful, of tact and manners. And much of what was considered within the bounds of tact and manners a generation ago would now shock even the most past-hugging right-winger.


I don't necessarily agree with all the views expressed in the OpEd piece but there are some salient points made though. I've been, or seen others, interrupted enough in order to have their terminology 'corrected' when what was being expressed, and how, was not needing of correction (let alone being interrupted to do so) that I'd have to agree that in at least a great many situations it has become a wet blanket that stifles open discourse.
I never assume you do. And you are correct. In this as in all things, there are people who take it too far. Just as on the other side of the issue, there are people who will consider the end of "PC," should it come, as license to be deliberately offensive for no reason other than to salve their own terror. Boomster and Blackleaf spring to mind.
 

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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It's hard to figure out exactly what the origin of the term was. Was it lefties dragooning speech, or righties whining about people objecting to their hate speech? Either way, whilst tact and manners are indeed not new, nor are violations, often gleeful, of tact and manners. And much of what was considered within the bounds of tact and manners a generation ago would now shock even the most past-hugging right-winger.

I never assume you do. And you are correct. In this as in all things, there are people who take it too far. Just as on the other side of the issue, there are people who will consider the end of "PC," should it come, as license to be deliberately offensive for no reason other than to salve their own terror. Boomster and Blackleaf spring to mind.

My inclination is to drag rudeness out into the light of day and the under lying theme behind political correctness, I've always believed, is to silence it. And I don't think we gain anything by silencing it. We completely remove such things as context, which is a tremendously large component in deciphering whether someone saying something is actually racist or just saying something stupid out of anger or ignorance or whatever. I think back to my grandfather, a product of his generation who would use terminology that would be considered very non-PC, not constantly mind you but on enough occasion that it would make me cringe now and then. His intention was never to be deliberately offensive. I've always viewed the rhetoric commonly associated with his generation as being uninformed, which is not necessarily racist or sexist or "evil" in any particular way. And I say this because his views did change, younger generations conversed with him and his mind did open to new thoughts, new ideas. New to him anyway. And if that's not what we want for someone with a closed mind/narrow mindset then I don't know what we do want.

The notion behind political correctness, politically correct speech may be an updated version of tact and manners (and that's all well and good) but the effect is that it's simply a band-aid "solution". The wound is still there and in many case could indeed be infected, but we don't have to look at it because we put a band aid over it. And in that way it can, and I believe does, do real harm.

Yes there are always going to be 'extremists', ones who will say what they want how they want. So what? If it's there then it can be challenged, if it's only bullsh!t rhetoric then there won't be any of substance behind it and it will fade away on it's own, if there is something substantive behind it, then dialogue can begin. But none of that can happen if it's silenced.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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My inclination is to drag rudeness out into the light of day and the under lying theme behind political correctness, I've always believed, is to silence it. And I don't think we gain anything by silencing it.
It simply drives it underground. I was actually encouraged by the blossoming of overt racism that accompanied Obama's election. It's the 25% of bigotry that's left after you ensure full legal equality.

As far as the banners, three thoughts:

1. Some are sufficiently moronic as to think that silencing a person will change her mind.

2. Some more see two benefits to silencing: one less thing the traditionally discriminated-against have to deal with and the hope that by silencing it, it will be less likely to be passed on to the next generation.

3. Much of the so-called "forbidding" of speech is no such thing, it is social disapproval, in other words, the same enforcers of tact and courtesy that have always applied.

NB: I realize we approach this from somewhat different perspectives. I understand that in Canada the government can actually act against so-called hate speech. Not here. Down hereabouts, the racists whining about how expressing their hate is "forbidden" mean that there is an increasing slice of society that won't put up with their sh*t, not that the government will do anything (there's almost nothing the government can do, under our notions of free speech).

We completely remove such things as context, which is a tremendously large component in deciphering whether someone saying something is actually racist or just saying something stupid out of anger or ignorance or whatever.
No, "we" don't. The militant fringe does, and sometimes they talk the majority into agreeing. And sometimes they don't.

I think back to my grandfather, a product of his generation who would use terminology that would be considered very non-PC, not constantly mind you but on enough occasion that it would make me cringe now and then. His intention was never to be deliberately offensive. I've always viewed the rhetoric commonly associated with his generation as being uninformed, which is not necessarily racist or sexist or "evil" in any particular way. And I say this because his views did change, younger generations conversed with him and his mind did open to new thoughts, new ideas. New to him anyway. And if that's not what we want for someone with a closed mind/narrow mindset then I don't know what we do want.
That happens. And in many cases it doesn't happen.

The notion behind political correctness, politically correct speech may be an updated version of tact and manners (and that's all well and good) but the effect is that it's simply a band-aid "solution". The wound is still there and in many case could indeed be infected, but we don't have to look at it because we put a band aid over it. And in that way it can, and I believe does, do real harm.
As does allowing continual belittling of women, minorities, the disabled, &c., particularly in schools and workplaces.

Yes there are always going to be 'extremists', ones who will say what they want how they want. So what? If it's there then it can be challenged, if it's only bullsh!t rhetoric then there won't be any of substance behind it and it will fade away on it's own, if there is something substantive behind it, then dialogue can begin. But none of that can happen if it's silenced.
Already addressed most of that. And don't think that what I've said is my own feelings on the matter. I was just giving you the other side.

I figure "PC," which by the way we haven't even really defined, is a mixed bag of good, bad, and indifferent. I don't support it, don't condemn it. Like everything else, it has done both harm and good in society, and mostly had no effect at all.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
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It simply drives it underground. I was actually encouraged by the blossoming of overt racism that accompanied Obama's election. It's the 25% of bigotry that's left after you ensure full legal equality.

As far as the banners, three thoughts:

1. Some are sufficiently moronic as to think that silencing a person will change her mind.

2. Some more see two benefits to silencing: one less thing the traditionally discriminated-against have to deal with and the hope that by silencing it, it will be less likely to be passed on to the next generation.

3. Much of the so-called "forbidding" of speech is no such thing, it is social disapproval, in other words, the same enforcers of tact and courtesy that have always applied.

NB: I realize we approach this from somewhat different perspectives. I understand that in Canada the government can actually act against so-called hate speech. Not here. Down hereabouts, the racists whining about how expressing their hate is "forbidden" mean that there is an increasing slice of society that won't put up with their sh*t, not that the government will do anything (there's almost nothing the government can do, under our notions of free speech).

I agree it drives it underground, not a good place for it to be. It grows in the dark, the light is what can kill it but it will only kill it slowly over time. Social change, real change, takes generations to happen. But that is more sustainable, it is real change.

I can appreciate the appeal for the traditionally discriminated against having to deal with one less thing. Having said that though, just being a member of a 'traditionally discriminated" group doesn't mean that all instances that do not work in their favour are instances of discrimination. And I'm saying this as a member of one of those groups.


No, "we" don't. The militant fringe does, and sometimes they talk the majority into agreeing. And sometimes they don't.
Fair enough but I'm not so sure they talk the majority into agreeing so much as they stifle them into silence because nobody sane and rational wants to deal with the militant fringe. So they don't bother. It breeds complacency in that regard.

As does allowing continual belittling of women, minorities, the disabled, &c., particularly in schools and workplaces.
None of which I would ever participate in or condone. Still there is an overwhelming sense, and not just to me, of being constantly condescended to over matters involving the above just the same, particularly if one has an honest and legitimate criticism of someone who happens to be a member of one of the groups you've mentioned. Again, I say this as a member of one of those groups.


Already addressed most of that. And don't think that what I've said is my own feelings on the matter. I was just giving you the other side.

I figure "PC," which by the way we haven't even really defined, is a mixed bag of good, bad, and indifferent. I don't support it, don't condemn it. Like everything else, it has done both harm and good in society, and mostly had no effect at all.
I'm not sure I even really recognize a society anymore. I think we're mostly a cobbled together group of various discriminated individuals all clamouring to be the most important 'me, me, me' there is.
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Political correctness is a term that needs to be taken with a grain of salt, like 'left' and 'right'.

At this point, the term is so loaded, we are probably better off using more specific qualifiers that it can encompass - like 'politeness' or 'cultural sensitivity'.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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I agree it drives it underground, not a good place for it to be. It grows in the dark, the light is what can kill it but it will only kill it slowly over time. Social change, real change, takes generations to happen. But that is more sustainable, it is real change.

I can appreciate the appeal for the traditionally discriminated against having to deal with one less thing. Having said that though, just being a member of a 'traditionally discriminated" group doesn't mean that all instances that do not work in their favour are instances of discrimination. And I'm saying this as a member of one of those groups.
I agree. I really don't give a damn what anybody says. And I prefer to know who my enemies are.

Nonetheless, one of the few ways the U.S. government can deal with speech is abusive and belittling speech against minorities and women in education and the workplace. It's called "creating a hostile work environment," and it's treated as education or employment discrimination. This is simple acknowledgement of the reality that when you call somebody "n*gger" every day until he quits, it's not "Aw, we wuz just funnin'." It's invidious discrimination.


Fair enough but I'm not so sure they talk the majority into agreeing so much as they stifle them into silence because nobody sane and rational wants to deal with the militant fringe. So they don't bother. It breeds complacency in that regard.

None of which I would ever participate in or condone. Still there is an overwhelming sense, and not just to me, of being constantly condescended to over matters involving the above just the same, particularly if one has an honest and legitimate criticism of someone who happens to be a member of one of the groups you've mentioned. Again, I say this as a member of one of those groups.
All true, and I share the contempt for individuals and groups who regard every little thing as "microaggression." Still, as an example, if someone perpetually uses feminine characteristics or women as a synonym for weakness, it can be both wearing in and of itself, and it makes you wonder if that person doesn't also discriminate against women, consciously or unconsciously. And I agree that the best way to deal with such people is to subject them to the usual range of social pressures used against the crude and boorish, EXCEPT when that person has authority in education or employment.


I'm not sure I even really recognize a society anymore. I think we're mostly a cobbled together group of various discriminated individuals all clamouring to be the most important 'me, me, me' there is.
I'll still take it over the Indian school.
 

Corduroy

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This article is 5 years old but it read like it's 20. Bill Maher even named his show "politically incorrect?" Yeah... in 1993. It's been over 10 years since it was cancelled. The spectre of political correctness is not a thing you baby boomers need to worry about anymore. It's the 21st century.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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This article is 5 years old but it read like it's 20. Bill Maher even named his show "politically incorrect?" Yeah... in 1993. It's been over 10 years since it was cancelled. The spectre of political correctness is not a thing you baby boomers need to worry about anymore. It's the 21st century.
*shakes cane at Corduroy* You show some respect, young whippersnapper! And get off my lawn!
 

mentalfloss

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Is it just me or is it older folk who are the most obsessed with political correctness?

What's wrong with these people?
 

Cliffy

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Is it just me or is it older folk who are the most obsessed with political correctness?

What's wrong with these people?
Ya, bunch of retards. Who shives a git what others think anyway. They should be more concerned with their supply of Depends and Metamucil.
 

gopher

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Tecumsehsbones; said:
It's hard to figure out exactly what the origin of the term was. Was it lefties dragooning speech, or righties whining about people objecting to their hate speech? Either way, whilst tact and manners are indeed not new, nor are violations, often gleeful, of tact and manners. And much of what was considered within the bounds of tact and manners a generation ago would now shock even the most past-hugging right-winger.


I thought that I posted this or another article like it a long while ago:


The Origins of Political Correctness



The Origins of Political Correctness



An Accuracy in Academia Address by Bill Lind

Variations of this speech have been delivered to various AIA conferences including the 2000 Consevative University at American University

Where does all this stuff that you’ve heard about this morning – the victim feminism, the gay rights movement, the invented statistics, the rewritten history, the lies, the demands, all the rest of it – where does it come from? For the first time in our history, Americans have to be fearful of what they say, of what they write, and of what they think. They have to be afraid of using the wrong word, a word denounced as offensive or insensitive, or racist, sexist, or homophobic.

We have seen other countries, particularly in this century, where this has been the case. And we have always regarded them with a mixture of pity, and to be truthful, some amusement, because it has struck us as so strange that people would allow a situation to develop where they would be afraid of what words they used. But we now have this situation in this country. We have it primarily on college campuses, but it is spreading throughout the whole society. Were does it come from? What is it?

We call it “Political Correctness.” The name originated as something of a joke, literally in a comic strip, and we tend still to think of it as only half-serious. In fact, it’s deadly serious. It is the great disease of our century, the disease that has left tens of millions of people dead in Europe, in Russia, in China, indeed around the world. It is the disease of ideology. PC is not funny. PC is deadly serious.




more ....




Right wingers have always believed that only their slant on politics or history is correct and that all others are subversive. For example, Operation ajax, the Vietnam war, and other acts of militarism by the USA on Latin American countries in which democratically elected officials were assassinated by CIA dupes were described as imperialism by academics and historians. To the right wingers these were said to be for the good of those invaded countries and that failure to say so was not ''politically correct''. As for Lind, he is a huge proponent of the military industrial complex but never served in the military and said the racial divide would not exist in the USA today if the South had on the Civil War.
 

gopher

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It is politically correct according to right wing delusionals to say the USA was meant to be a Christian nation - a topic we have discussed and debunked before on this forum. The following article takes a look at that myth and settles the issue:


Christian America is an invention: Big business, right-wing politics and the religious lie that still divides us
The idea of "one nation under God" is a modern one -- and does not date back to the Founding Fathers



Christian America is an invention: Big business, right-wing politics and the religious lie that still divides us - Salon.com



When he ran for the White House, Texas governor George W. Bush took a similarly soft approach, though one that came from the right. A born-again Christian, he shared Bill Clinton’s ability to discuss his faith openly. When Republican primary candidates were asked to name their favorite philosopher in a 1999 debate, for instance, Bush immediately named Christ, “because He changed my heart.” Despite the centrality of faith in his own life, Bush assured voters that he would not implement the rigid agenda of the religious right. Borrowing a phrase from author Marvin Olasky, Bush called himself a “compassionate conservative” and said he would take a lighter approach to social issues including abortion and gay rights than culture warriors such as Pat Buchanan. But many on the right took issue with the phrase. For some, the “compassionate” qualifier implicitly condemned mainstream conservatism as heartless; for others, the phrase seemed an empty marketing gimmick. (As Republican speechwriter David Frum put it, “Love conservatism but hate arguing about abortion? Try our new compassionate conservatism—great ideological taste, now with less controversy.”) But the candidate backed his words with deeds, distancing himself from the ideologues in his party. In a single week in October 1999, for instance, Bush criticized House Republicans for “balancing the budget on the backs of the poor” and lamented that all too often “my party has painted an image of America slouching toward Gomorrah.”

In concrete terms, Bush’s “compassionate conservatism” constituted a promise to empower private religious and community organizations and thereby expand their role in the provision of social services. This “faith* based initiative” became the centerpiece of his campaign. In his address to the 2000 Republican National Convention, Bush heralded the work of Christian charities and called upon the nation to do what it could to sup*port them. After his inauguration, Bush moved swiftly to make the pro*posal a reality. Indeed, the longest section of his 2001 inaugural address was an expansive reflection on the idea. “America, at its best, is compassionate,” he observed. “Church and charity, synagogue and mosque lend our communities their humanity, and they will have an honored place in our plans and in our laws.” Bush promoted the initiative at his first Na*tional Prayer Breakfast as well. But it was ill-fated. Hamstrung by a lack of clear direction during the administration’s first months, it was quickly overshadowed by a new emphasis on national security after the terrorist attacks of 9/11.

Bush continued to advance his vision of a godly nation. Soon after 9/11, he made a special trip to the Islamic Center of Washington, the very same mosque that had opened its doors to celebrate the Eisenhower inauguration a half century earlier. No sitting president had ever visited an Islamic house of worship, but Bush made clear by his words and deeds there that he considered Muslims part of the nation’s diverse religious community. He denounced recent acts of violence against Muslims and Arab Americans in no uncertain terms. “Those who feel like they can intimidate our fellow citizens to take out their anger don’t represent the best of America,” he said; “they represent the worst of humankind and they should be ashamed.” Referring to Islam as a “religion of peace” and citing the Koran, he closed his address with the same words of inclusion he would have used before any audience, religious or otherwise: “God bless us all.” The president was not alone in enlisting religious patriotism to demonstrate national unity after the attacks. On September 12, 2001, congressional representatives from both parties joined together on the Capitol steps to sing “God Bless America.”Meanwhile, several states that did not already require recitations of the Pledge of Allegiance in their schools introduced bills to do just that.

But the efforts to use the pledge as a source of unity were soon thrown into disarray. In June 2002, a federal court ruled that the phrase “one na*tion under God” violated the First Amendment prohibition against the establishment of a state religion. The case Newdow v. Elk Grove Unified School District had been filed in 2000 by Michael Newdow, an emergency room doctor who complained that his daughter’s rights were infringed because she was forced to “watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God, and that ours is ‘one nation under God.” In a 2-to-1 decision, the court agreed. It held that the phrase was just as objectionable as a statement that “we are a nation ‘under Jesus,’ a nation ‘under Vishnu,’ a nation ‘under Zeus,’ or a nation ‘under no god,’ because none of these professions can be neutral with respect to religion.” The reaction from political leaders was as swift as it was predictable. The Senate suspended debate on a pending military spending bill to draft a resolution condemning the ruling, while dozens of House members took to the Capitol steps to recite the pledge and sing “God Bless America” one more time. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer announced that the president thought the decision was “ridiculous”; Democratic senator Tom Daschle called it “nuts.” The reaction was so pronounced, in fact, that the appeals court delayed implementation of its ruling until an appeal could be heard.

As the case made its way through the courts, the nation had to reckon anew with the meaning of “one nation under God.” According to Newdow, an atheist, the language of the amended pledge clearly took “one side in the quintessential religious question ‘Does God exist?’” The Bush administration, defending the pledge, asserted that reciting it was no more a religious act than using a coin with “In God We Trust” inscribed on it; both merely acknowledged the nation’s heritage. A separate brief filed by conservative religious organizations, however, argued that the pledge was “both theological and political.” Reviving claims of the Christian libertarians, it asserted that the words “under God” were added to underscore the concept of limited government. They were meant as a reminder that “government is not the highest authority in human affairs” because, as the Declaration of Independence claimed, “inalienable rights come from God.” In June 2004, the Supreme Court ruled that Newdow technically lacked standing to bring the suit and thus dismissed the lower court’s ruling, dodging the issue for the time being.

Having survived that challenge in the courts, the concept of “one nation under God” thrived on the campaign trail. Seeking to rally religious voters for the 2004 election, Republican strategist Karl Rove advocated a “play-to-the-base” plan to exploit the concerns of the religious right for electoral gain.The president passed two major pieces of pro-life legisla*tion and then joined the campaign for a Federal Marriage Amendment to ban homosexual unions. Many on the right saw the coming campaign as the kind of”religious war” that Pat Buchanan heralded a decade before. The Bush campaign worked to capitalize on “the God gap” in the elector*ate, mobilizing religious conservatives in record numbers. In Allentown, Pennsylvania, one backer erected a billboard that summed up the unofficial strategy of the Republicans: “Bush Cheney ’04-0ne Nation Under God.” The Democrats, meanwhile, gave the politics of religion compara*tively little attention. John Kerry’s presidential campaign relegated much of its national religious outreach to a twenty-eight-year-old newcomer who had virtually no institutional support, not even an old database of contacts. “The matchup between the two parties in pursuit of religious voters wasn’t just David versus Goliath,” the journalist Amy Sullivan wrote.”It was David versus Goliath and the Philistines and the Assyrians and the Egyptians, with a few plagues thrown in for good measure.”

* * *

The notable exception to the Democrats’ avoidance of re*ligious rhetoric came at the party’s national convention. Then a largely unknown state senator from Illinois, Barack Obama introduced himself to the country with a stirring speech that emphasized religious values as a source of national unity. Obama dismissed those who would “use faith as a wedge to divide us,” proclaiming to loud applause that ”we worship an ‘awesome God’ in the blue states.” “We are one people,” Obama insisted, “all of us pledging allegiance to the Stars and Stripes, all of us defending the United States of America.” Citing the Declaration of Independence, he rooted his fellow citizens’ rights in their Creator but insisted that their responsibilities stemmed from God as well. What “makes this country work,” Obama observed, was a belief based on lessons in the Bible: “I am my brother’s keeper; I am my sister’s keeper.” He ended his address with an optimistic invocation of piety and patriotism reminiscent of the speeches of Ronald Reagan. “The audacity of hope!” he proclaimed. “In the end, that is God ‘s greatest gift to us, the bedrock of this nation.” As the crowd roared, he completed his speech with a now-familiar ritual: “God bless you.”

The keynote address made Obama a contender in the presidential contest just four years later, but it did not protect him from doubts about his commitment to his God and his country. In early 2008, inflammatory comments made by Reverend Jeremiah Wright, his longtime pastor at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, came to light, threatening to cripple his campaign. In an excerpt from a 2003 sermon replayed endlessly on cable news networks, the fiery preacher told his congregation that African Americans should condemn the United States. “God damn America for treating our citizens as less than human!” Wright shouted. “God damn America for as long as she acts like she is God and she is supreme.” Obama stated that he thought his pastor’s “rants” were “appalling,” and in March 2008, he confronted the controversy in a major speech in Philadelphia. Though race, rather than religion, emerged as the central theme, Obama employed the language of faith to explain his pastor’s statements and, at the same time, distance himself from them. “I have asserted a firm conviction—a conviction rooted in my faith in God and my faith in the American people,” Obama insisted, “that working together we can move beyond some of our old racial wounds, and that in fact we have no choice if we are to continue on the path of a more perfect union.”

Religion played an even more prominent role in the race for the Republican nomination. In a November 2007 debate, CNN showed a videotaped question from a voter who held up a Christian version of the Bible and said, “How you answer this question will tell us everything we need to know about you: Do you believe every word of this book?” The conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer insisted that the candidates should have answered that it was “none of your damn business,” but instead all of them “bent a knee and tried appeasement with various interpretations of scriptural literalism.” Indeed, the Republican field seemed especially eager to outdo one another’s professions of piety. Arizona senator John McCain, who had boldly denounced Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson as “agents of intolerance” in his losing bid in the 2000 primaries, spent much of his second run mending fences with them. He made a major address at Falwell’s Liberty University, where he asserted, despite all evidence to the contrary, that “the Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation.” New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, meanwhile, proudly won Robertson’s endorsement. Not to be outdone, Arkansas gov*ernor Mike Huckabee, a former Baptist minister, attributed his strong showing in the polls to “the same power that helped a little boy with two fish and five loaves feed a crowd of 5,000 people.”

No Republican candidate, however, was challenged more by ques*tions of faith than Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney. The first Mor*mon to make a significant run for the presidency, he found his campaign struggling to overcome distrust by evangelical voters at the party’s base. Romney staged a major speech on “Faith in America” at the presidential library of George H. W. Bush. Though he stood by his faith and made clear that he shared common ground with more traditional Christians, Romney only used the word “Mormon” once. Instead, the bulk of his address focused on the proper place of faith in American politics. “Freedom requires religion,” he argued, “just as religion requires freedom.” He promised never to force his own values on the nation as a whole, but also said he believed that religious principles in general were essential to the continued health of the nation. The Constitution rested on a “foundation of faith,” Romney said, and its framers “did not countenance the elimina*tion of religion from the public square. We are a nation ‘under God,’ and in God we do indeed trust.”

* * *

These invocations reveal that the rhetoric and rituals of public religion have lived on to the present day. Indeed, if anything, such touchstones of religious nationalism have only be * come more deeply lodged in American political culture over time, as the innovations of one generation became familiar traditions for the next. But as these religious notes have been drummed into the national conscious* ness, almost by rote, we have forgotten their origins. More than that, we have forgotten they have origins at all.

And their origins, it turns out, are rather surprising. The rites of our public religion originated not in a spiritual crisis, but rather in the polit*ical and economic turmoil of the Great Depression. The story of busi*ness leaders enlisting clergymen in their war against the New Deal is one that has been largely obscured by the very ideology that resulted from it.

Previous accounts of the tangled relationship between Christianity and capitalism have noted the “uneasy alliance” between businessmen and the religious right which helped elect Ronald Reagan and end the New Deal order, but the careers of the Christian libertarians in the 1930s and 1940s show that their alliance was present at the creation of the New Deal. Their ideology of “freedom under God” did not topple the regulatory state as they hoped, but thanks to the evangelism of conservative clergymen such as James Fifield, Abraham Vereide, and Billy Graham, it ultimately accomplished more than its corporate creators ever dreamed possible. It convinced a wide range of Americans that their country had been, and should always be, a Christian nation.

In the early 1950s, the long crusade of the Christian libertarians apparently reached its triumphant climax with the election of Dwight Eisenhower. But the new president proved to be transformative in a sense his corporate backers had not anticipated. Although he was certainly sympathetic to the secular ends they sought, Eisenhower proved to be much more interested in the spiritual language they had invented as a means of achieving those ends. Uncoupling their religious rhetoric from its roots in the fight against the New Deal, he considerably broadened its appeal, expanding its reach well beyond the initial circle of conservative Protestants to welcome Americans across the political and religious spectrum. In doing so, Eisenhower ushered in an unprecedented religious revival, one that temporarily filled the nation’s churches and synagogues but permanently altered its political culture. From then on, the federal government, which the Christian libertarians had long denounced as godless, was increasingly seen as quite godly instead. Congress cemented these changes, adding “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance and adopting “In God We Trust” as the nation’s first official motto. Hollywood and Madison Avenue, meanwhile, helped promote this understanding of America as a religious nation and Americans as an inherently religious people.

The new rituals of public religion crafted in the Eisenhower era were seen at the time as symbolic flourishes with little substance to them. But the rites and rhetoric that Eugene Rostow dismissed as mere “ceremonial deism” in 1962 were soon revealed to have incredible political power. National controversies over school prayer—which unfolded first in the Supreme Court and then in Congress—demonstrated that the symbols and slogans of the Eisenhower era, instituted less than a decade earlier, had quickly been embraced by many Americans as ironclad evidence of the nation’s religious roots. As conservatives fought to restore school prayer and to roll back other social changes in the turbulent 1960s, they rallied around phrases like ”one nation under God.” As a result, the religious rhetoric that had recently been used to unite Americans began to drive them further apart. At the decade’s end, Richard Nixon helped complete this polarization of the nation’s public religion, using it to advance divisive policies both at home and abroad.

This history reminds us that our public religion is, in large measure, an invention of the modern era. The ceremonies and symbols that breathe life into the belief that we are “one nation under God” were not, as many Americans believe, created alongside the nation itself. Their parentage stems not from the founding fathers but from an era much closer to our own, the era of our own fathers and mothers, our grandfathers and grand*mothers. This fact need not diminish their importance; fresh traditions can be more powerful than older ones adhered to out of habit. Neverthe*less, we do violence to our past if we treat certain phrases — ”one nation under God,”"In God We Trust” — as sacred texts handed down to us from the nation’s founding. Instead, we are better served if we understand these utterances for what they are: political slogans that speak not to the origins of our nation but to a specific point in its not-so-distant past. If they are to mean anything to us now, we should understand what they meant then.






"Politically correct" myths die hard. But the facts clearly show that these myths are without basis.