Rebane's Ruminations
September 2011
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George Rebane

[This is the transcript of my regular KVMR commentary broadcast on 2 September 2011.  Podcast here.]

Please accept my apologies for the extended respite you have enjoyed over the last weeks from hearing the outrageous thoughts of KVMR’s lonesome conservetarian commentator.  August got unexpectedly busy with all kinds of matters involving travel and grandkids.  So let me try to make up for it here and now with some thoughts on God’s hand and free speech.

On Rebane’s Ruminations a regular reader, who also happens to be Nevada County’s beloved cartoonist of Village Idiot fame, pointed out that Michelle Bachmann had joined the hand of God to the hurricane Irene.  The point being that here we saw exposed a possible primitive superstition in a candidate who wants to be President of the United States.  And the imparted conclusion being, what modern civilized American would ever accept someone as the nation’s leader, someone who thinks God can and does mess with weather.

Let me quickly qualify that this is not a secular humanist observation held only by locals, but is a longstanding assessment of the national left.  ‘We can’t have those bible-thumpers anywhere near the Oval Office.’

The inconvenient truth here is that God messing in the affairs of this universe and Man is a robust and fundamental tenet in all the world’s religions.  And this includes the belief systems of over 200M Americans who claim residence in the Judeo-Christian, Islamic, and Native American faiths.  Modern history overflows with national leaders publicly beseeching the Lord to intervene in their personal and their country’s behalf when faced with portents of manmade and natural disasters.  In recent times we didn’t sacrifice virgins; but then again, if that would have helped … I don’t know.


My own view is that attempting to characterize faith-revealing candidates as belonging to the lunatic fringe will backfire, and therefore be beneficial in the national dialogue.  For that reason I heartily welcome future faith-based barbs from our progressive brethren.  But this debate may also reveal the next layer in what Canadian commentator Mark Steyn calls ‘gagging us softly’.

Given the unceasing expansion of politically proscribed speech, it would not be a stretch to hear of some in Congress begin to concern themselves about candidates for public office infusing their speeches with notions of God – after all, don’t we have separation of church and state?

Steyn’s commentary on the “tolerant assault on free speech” details the alarming (at least to people like me) incidence of advanced western countries banning and prosecuting not only wrong speech, but ‘regular speech’ that will be considered wrong given who might be listening to it.  He cites numerous commentators, politicians, and even private citizens who have been prosecuted in Great Britain, Germany, Austria, France, Holland, Australia, and Denmark for speech considered to have racist or various phobic content, or even for such deemed but unexpressed thought behind what someone says.

As Steyn points out, in England the same words coming from different mouths can be taken to task for different reasons.  “If a Muslim says that Islam is opposed to homosexuality, Scotland Yard will investigate him for homophobia; but if a gay says that Islam is opposed to homosexuality, Scotland Yard will investigate him for Islamophobia.”  Go figger.

In these advanced countries they are now beyond calls for regulating speech in their media, and prosecuting people for saying what the government considers wrong is already old hat.  Here in America the progressive portion, judging from their media commentaries, feels that we are being left behind in the rush to shaping the perfect environmentally sensitive, politically collectivist, racially neutral, culturally inclusive, economically passive, and behaviorally compliant citizen.

Dear listener, we are not far in the lee of our European cousins, and attempts to silence certain types of speech in the name of ‘tolerance’ can be heard both across the land, and all the way into these Sierra foothills.  In 1644 John Milton wrote, “Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties.”   And one of our Canadian neighbors said it even better, “Give me the right to free speech, and I will use it to claim all my other rights.”

My name is Rebane, and I also expand on these and other themes in my Union columns, and on georgerebane.com where this transcript appears.  These opinions are not necessarily shared by KVMR.  Thank you for listening.

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7 responses to “When free speech goes …”

  1. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Sad that we have to say these things. If we are able to take back the education process, maybe the chillins will be indoctrinated in freedom. OMG! Is that politically correct?

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  2. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    I remember when Obama wrote a prayer on a note and stuck it in the Western Wall in Jerusalem. Some kid walked over and pulled it out it was published. “Lord–Protect my family and me. Forgive me my sins, and help me guard against pride and despair. Give me the wisdom to do what is right and just. And make me an instrument of your will.”
    Aside from the to-do over the issue of the violation of privacy that followed, how are Obama’s beliefs on the super-natural power of the deity different from Bachmann’s? Carrie Prejean was pilloried for her views on gay marriage, even though they matched Obama’s. The difference is in how the public views the integrity of the actors here. Folks assume that Carrie and Michele are revealing heart-felt truth, while Obama is seen by all to be an empty suit with a teleprompter soul and mindset.

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  3. RL Crabb Avatar

    I have no prejudice against religion per se. I think I’ve made that clear in previous comments. I do have concerns about those who would use the book of revelations as a guidebook to foreign policy, or the persecution of those they see as heretics and sinners. I watch a lot of religious programming on TV, and I remember Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker. To someone who used drugs (I don’t anymore) it was obvious that Tammy Faye was under the influence of something other than the Almighty. The road to salvation is littered with the wreckage of religious leaders gone bad. Faith in itself is not a hinderance to high office. John Kennedy proved that when he got elected after centuries of Catholic persecution. But if someone in that high office goes crosseyed and starts looking for the answers to man’s problems from voices in his or her head, it can’t be a good thing for us heathens.

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  4. Paul Emery Avatar
    Paul Emery

    I thought we all conceded that Ms Bachmann was only joking right (by her own admission) so what’s the big deal? I doubt very seriously that the big whatever in the sky gives a rats ass about our petty politics here on our little planet.

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  5. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    The people that freak out over a politicians religious beliefs must need Valium to keep them from heading over the cliff. Since they all are claiming to be religious, the voter then must determine in their own mind if the person running is too religious or just a little religious. Then vote accordingly. I guess if a Obama says he is and Bachmann says she is, the only difference would be liberal or conservative all things being equal.

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  6. RL Crabb Avatar

    God may not care much about politics, but his agents here on earth take it very seriously. There are cartoonists in Europe who live with armed guards because of Islamic fanatics. Secular governments aren’t immune. Religion wasn’t the reason for this latest outrage…
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=syrian=cartoonist–attacked-by-gunmen-2011-08-25

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  7. RL Crabb Avatar

    For some reason, that link ends up on the wrong page. Just google ‘syrian cartoonist’ and you’ll find the story.

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