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Religion
Related: About this forumOne army under God?
http://www.economist.com/blogs/erasmus/2014/09/religion-and-american-armed-forcesReligion and the American armed forces
Sep 9th 2014, 16:26 by B.C.
THE path from leaving Bibles in naval hotel rooms to placing weapons of mass destruction in the hands of religious zealots might seem rather a long one. But Mikey Weinstein, a former Air Force captain who set up the Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), argues with passion that both things are undesirable for the same reason, and both need to be opposed in the same spirit. His watchdog and campaign group has set itself the task of challenging a new variety of fundamentalism which it says is afoot in the services. It insists that the armed forces, like every other form of state authority, must be religiously neutral in accordance with the Constitution.
One of the latest battles joined by the MRFF, and several other lobby groups, concerned the practice of leaving Bibles supplied by the Gideons, a charity which encourages the study of scripture, inside rooms in lodgings run by the navy. About a month ago, it emerged that Gideon Bibles had been removed from at least 3,000 rooms in navy lodges in response to secularist complaints. That in turn triggered massive protests from Christian and conservative lobby groups, and the Bibles were duly returned to the rooms. Mr Weinstein was disappointed: he insists that there is a real difference between making religious material available upon request at a registration desk, and placing such materialwhether it be Christian, Muslim or even atheistinside rooms. In his view, the latter practice indicates that the powers that be have taken the side of a particular religion, which the First Amendment forbids.
Whether Bibles are kept at registration desks or inside rooms may not seem all that big a deal. But the human stakes are higher in another religious-military row that erupted last month, when an atheist airman at a base in Nevada was denied the opportunity to re-enlist because he declined to say the words "so help me God". In an older air force regulation, it was laid down that those four words could be omitted on grounds of conscience; but this waiver was removed from a new rule issued last yearyou either invoke the Deity or you cannot take up your responsibilities to the nation.
In Mr Weinstein's view, that change in the rules is a symptom of a new form of religious intolerance that has gained ground in the armed forces to the dismay of mainline Christians, among others. He calls the new religious mentality "dominionism"a pejorative term for forms of Christianity that want to build religious principles into earthly power structures. One sceptical definition of "dominionism" describes it as "a theocratic view that...heterosexual Christian men are called by God to exercise dominion over secular society by taking control of political and cultural institutions."
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One army under God? (Original Post)
cbayer
Sep 2014
OP
Christian dominionism: Scary extreme rightwing religious propaganda pushed at the point of a gun.
blkmusclmachine
Sep 2014
#1
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)1. Christian dominionism: Scary extreme rightwing religious propaganda pushed at the point of a gun.
I often wonder how many of these Christian dominionist Air Force recruits were on board the hijacked planes on 9/11???
cbayer
(146,218 posts)2. I don't understand what you are saying about the 9/11 planes.
AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)3. Uh. Can you elaoborate on what you are asking?
55 military personnel were killed, but they were all on the receiving end inside the Pentagon.