Huckabee_haloBy Selwyn Duke

There is a candidate in the presidential race who has a serious religion problem.  No, it’s not Mormon Mitt or recently-religious Rudy.  It is Mike Huckabee.

Just for the record, I share Huck’s faith in Jesus Christ.  Not only have I no problem with religion in public life, I also understand that one can’t really separate a person’s world view from his politics.  The political is merely a reflection of the spiritual; our politics doesn’t emerge in a vacuum.

So what is my problem with Huck?  Do I accuse him of false religiosity?

No, what scares me is that his beliefs are all too real. 

To that enormous secular conservative voting block out there, I will
say, be not afraid.  It’s not that Huck would impose religion through
government.  No, his actions would truly offend you.

He would impose statism in the name of religion through government.

While Huck will say what you want to hear to win office, he will not
hear what you want to say once there.  He will make tone-deaf Bush seem
like a maestro.  How do I know this?

He believes. 

Belief
can be a great thing, of course.  Our Founding Fathers’ unprecedented
respect for liberty was born of their Christian belief that rights were
bestowed by the divine king and not worldly ones.  Mother Teresa’s
Christian beliefs inspired her to toil tirelessly to aid the destitute
and dying in India.  But whereas the founders kept charity out of
government and Teresa kept government out of charity, Huck conflates
the two in a disastrous mix of bad theology and bad political science.
Perverting Christianity’s message and violating 2000 years of its
tradition, he believes it is his Christian mandate to do good works
through government. 

With, of course, your money. 

Huck
invokes faith to justify ambitions ranging from the insidious to the
idiotic.  For the former, look no further than immigration, where Huck
espoused the Christian principle, "Do unto others as you would have
others do unto you," while advocating an apparent open-door policy.
This, despite the fact that if any good Christian were to find himself
in a country illegally, he would expect its citizens to demand he
return home. 

This
illegal-enabling attitude was also apparent in a deal to establish a
partially taxpayer-financed Mexican consulate office in Little Rock, a
scheme involving the lease of building space to the Mexican government
for $1 a year.  Then there was Huck’s support of drivers’ licenses,
government benefits and in-state tuition rates for illegals and his
opposition to a bill requiring proof of citizenship to vote.   

What was the motivation for these outrages?  While some critics assert
that he created a "magnet" for illegals at the behest of business
interests, for certain is that Huck invoked his Christian faith while
attacking supporters of the proof-of-citizenship bill.  He labeled the
measure irresponsible, un-American, anti-life and un-Christian.  This prompted one of the assailed legislators, Jim Holt, to
say that "Christian charity does not include turning a blind eye to lawbreaking."

The problem, according to many, is that Huck doesn’t agree.  For instance, Daniel Larison at the American Conservative wrote,

".
. . Huckabee regards it as his Christian duty to help subvert and
liberalize U.S. immigration laws.  Together [with Sam Brownback], they
embrace the notion that fidelity to the Gospel requires privileging the
interests of non-citizens over those of fellow citizens."

(Note:
This is why immigration crusader Tom Tancredo just exited the
presidential race and endorsed Romney; he knows Mexicali Mike must be
stopped.) 

Huck explicitly cited
the same "Christian duty" when explaining a lenient attitude toward
felons that would allow for twice as many pardons under his Arkansas
administration as those of his last three predecessors combined.  Among those released on parole on his watch was the notorious Wayne Dumond,
a thug serving 25 years for raping a teenage high school cheerleader.
But Dumond had no feeling of Christian duty.  He then raped and
murdered a woman named Carol Sue Shields.

As
for that ol’ Huck sense of Christian duty, "Thou shalt not bear false
witness" seems no more a part of it than does the imperative to protect
the innocent.  He denied playing a role in Dumond’s pardon, but this is contradicted by the very man who had to sign the criminal’s parole papers, one Ermer Pondexter. Said he,

"I signed the [parole] papers because the governor wanted Dumond paroled."

This
Clintonesque relationship with truth also evidenced itself in the
YouTube debate when Huck was asked about his plan for college tuition
benefits for illegals.  Writing about this, columnist Jerome Corsi has "identified five specific, easily documented misrepresentations of historical facts" in Huck’s answer to the question.

Yet there is another fact: In his quest to fill the schools, Huck hasn’t forgotten citizens.  No, not at all.  Huck signed a bill
in Arkansas making it more difficult to homeschool your children,
perhaps at the behest of the left-wing National Education Association
(whose New Hampshire endorsement he captured).  The homeschooling
families supporting him should take note.

But
what will concern all families is Huck’s philosophy on one of the
biggest issues of our time, terrorism.  He has some very definite ideas about thwarting it, and they’re probably a bit different from yours.  Said Huck,

"We
must first destroy existing terrorist groups and then attack the
underlying conditions that breed them: the lack of basic sanitation,
health care, education, jobs, a free press, fair courts – which all
translates into a lack of opportunity and hope. The United States’
strategic interests as the world’s most powerful country coincide with
its moral obligations as the richest."

Ah,
true innovation: Giving social programs international scope.  And, I
wonder, does Huck know that Osama bin Laden is worth about $300
million?  I’ll also note that there is no moral obligation to use other
people’s money for your government-run charities.

Then there are Huck’s silly health-police measures.  He says he would favor a national smoking ban
(not the role of the federal government – unconstitutional).  Then,
many of us have heard about how Huck shed more than 100 pounds after
developing diabetes, a commendable achievement.  But, not content with
personal victory in the battle of the bulge, Huck took his crusade
public, creating a program to test the body-fat index of every student in Arkansas’ school system. 

Is
this Huck’s conception of small government and proper use of tax
money?  Does a 10-year-old child oft-teased as a double-wide need that
assessment affirmed through a taxpayer-funded program?  Yes, Christy,
just so you know, you’re now officially, legally fat – signed and
stamped by the state.   

Huck’s puerile passions are understandable, but not excusable.  He lost all that
weight, and he said his wife’s 1975 battle with cancer left him "scared
to death" of the disease.  Thus, like gun-control nut Carolyn McCarthy
— elected to Congress after her husband and son were shot in the L.I.R.R. massacre
— he is a statist who feels compelled to impose his passions through
government.  But, I’m sorry, I don’t find the nanny state more
attractive because she’s dressed up like the church lady. 

Protect our borders, Huck; I can protect my own lungs and arteries, thank you.

Perhaps
what’s most offensive about the Huck, though, is his clear message that
those opposed to his statist measures aren’t good Christians.  Yet I
will cede that he’s half right, in that we should pursue charity in
ways that correspond with our gifts.

And I hear that the Ghatal Missionary Baptist Fellowship in India is looking for candidates.

As for candidates, Huck is the only one who would bring not just missionary zeal to the White House, but missionary intentions.
This makes him especially dangerous because, to use a variation on a
famous Blaise Pascal line, men never grow government so completely and
cheerfully as when they do it with religious conviction.

This
is why those who support Huck because he has religious conviction ought
to wonder what those convictions actually are.  Is it enough that he
professes some version of Christianity?  I will remind you that Jesus
himself said,

"You
will know them by their fruits. . . .  Not everyone that says to me,
Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven. . . ."

Nor
do simple pronouncements qualify one to enter the White House.  Sure,
Huck now speaks in a tongue palatable to his audience; he’s Tom
Tancredo on immigration, Torquemada on punishment and the ancient
Chinese on border barriers.  But you can believe the rhetoric or the
reality.  He hasn’t changed his ways and in office would fulfill his
statist promise, not his promises.  How do I know?

Because he believes.

As a man of faith, I understand that when you believe your principles reflect God’s will, you won’t bend.

Ever.

This is the greatest asset; that is, when you have the right principles.

As to this, it’s just too bad the Church of Huck has nothing to say about lying to get elected.

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2 responses to “The Church of Huck: Growing Government in the Name of Religion”

  1. ConservativePopulist Avatar
    ConservativePopulist

    You seem to be infatuated with Mike Huckabee. How many articles have you written about him now? Give the guy a break, would ya? Maybe he’ll be the next Ronald Reagan if he’s elected. You never know. Maybe the party can convince him to have a change of heart while in office. Maybe they will say unto Huck, “Give unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s.”
    Mike Huckabee is my man. Rudy is too hawkish. Romney is too phony. McCain is O.K. And the rest of the Republicans have no personality whatsoever. As a matter of fact, I’d vote for Obama or Hillary before Rudy. Romney is a phony, but I’d vote for him because he doesn’t appear to be as hawkish as ol’ Rudy. Besides, Romney may surprise me. But with as many neocons as Rudy has surrounded himself with, no way I’m voting for him. I’m a paleocon right down to the bone.

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  2. Jim Baxter Avatar

    The Season of Generation- Choicemaker
    Joel 3:14 kjv
    Consider:
    The missing element in every human ‘solution’ is an
    accurate definition of the creature.
    In an effort to diminish the multiple and persistent
    dangers and abuses which have characterized the
    affairs of man in his every Age, and to assist in the
    requisite search for human identity, it is essential to
    perceive and specify that distinction which naturally
    and most uniquely defines the human being. Because
    definitions rule in the minds, behaviors, and institutions
    of men, we can be confident that delineating and com-
    municating that quality will assist the process of resolu-
    tion and the courageous ascension to which man is
    called. As Americans of the 21st Century, we are oblig-
    ed and privileged to join our forebears and participate
    in this continuing paradigm proclamation.
    “WHAT IS MAN…?” God asks – and answers:
    HUMAN DEFINED: EARTH’S CHOICEMAKER
    by James Fletcher Baxter (c) AD 2008
    The way we define ‘human’ determines our view of self,
    others, relationships, institutions, life, and future. Many
    problems in human experience are the result of false
    and inaccurate definitions of humankind premised
    in man-made religions and humanistic philosophies.
    Human knowledge is a fraction of the whole universe.
    The balance is a vast void of human ignorance. Human
    reason cannot fully function in such a void; thus, the
    intellect can rise no higher than the criteria by which it
    perceives and measures values.
    Humanism makes man his own standard of measure.
    However, as with all measuring systems, a standard
    must be greater than the value measured. Based on
    preponderant ignorance and an egocentric carnal
    nature, humanism demotes reason to the simpleton
    task of excuse-making in behalf of the rule of appe-
    tites, desires, feelings, emotions, and glands.
    Because man, hobbled in an ego-centric predicament,
    cannot invent criteria greater than himself, the humanist
    lacks a predictive capability. Without instinct or trans-
    cendent criteria, humanism cannot evaluate options with
    foresight and vision for progression and survival. Lack-
    ing foresight, man is blind to potential consequence and
    is unwittingly committed to mediocrity, collectivism,
    averages, and regression – and worse. Humanism is an
    unworthy worship.
    The void of human ignorance can easily be filled with
    a functional faith while not-so-patiently awaiting the
    foot-dragging growth of human knowledge and behav-
    ior. Faith, initiated by the Creator and revealed and
    validated in His Word, the Bible, brings a transcend-
    ent standard to man the choice-maker. Other philo-
    sophies and religions are man-made, humanism, and
    thereby lack what only the Bible has:
    1.Transcendent Criteria and
    2.Fulfilled Prophetic Validation.
    The vision of faith in God and His Word is survival
    equipment for today and the future. Only the Creator,
    who made us in His own image, is qualified to define
    us accurately.
    Human is earth’s Choicemaker. Psalm 25:12 He is by
    nature and nature’s God a creature of Choice – and of
    Criteria. Psalm 119:30,173 His unique and definitive
    characteristic is, and of Right ought to be, the natural
    foundation of his environments, institutions, and re-
    spectful relations to his fellow-man. Thus, he is orien-
    ted to a Freedom whose roots are in the Order of the
    universe.
    At the sub-atomic level of the physical universe quantum
    physics indicates a multifarious gap or division in the
    causal chain; particles to which position cannot be
    assigned at all times, systems that pass from one energy
    state to another without manifestation in intermediate
    states, entities without mass, fields whose substance is
    as insubstantial as “a probability.”
    Only statistical conglomerates pay tribute to
    deterministic forces. Singularities do not and are
    therefore random, unpredictable, mutant, and in this
    sense, uncaused. The finest contribution inanimate
    reality is capable of making toward choice, without its
    own selective agencies, is this continuing manifestation
    of opportunity as the pre-condition to choice it defers
    to the natural action of living forms.
    Biological science affirms that each level of life,
    single-cell to man himself, possesses attributes of
    sensitivity, discrimination, and selectivity, and in
    the exclusive and unique nature of each diversified
    life form.
    The survival and progression of life forms has all too
    often been dependent upon the ever-present undeterminative
    potential and appearance of one unique individual organism
    within the whole spectrum of a given life-form. Only the
    uniquely equipped individual organism is, like The Golden
    Wedge of Ophir, capable of traversing the causal gap to
    survival and progression. Mere reproductive determinacy
    would have rendered life forms incapable of such potential.
    Only a moving universe of opportunity plus choice enables
    the present reality.
    Each individual human being possesses a unique, highly
    developed, and sensitive perception of variety. Thus
    aware, man is endowed with a natural capability for enact-
    ing internal mental and external physical selectivity.
    Quantitative and qualitative choice-making thus lends
    itself as the superior basis of an active intelligence.
    Human is earth’s Choicemaker. His title describes
    his definitive and typifying characteristic. Recall
    that his other features are but vehicles of experi-
    ence intent on the development of perceptive
    awareness and the following acts of decision and
    choice. Note that the products of man cannot define
    him for they are the fruit of the discerning choice-
    making process and include the cognition of self,
    the utility of experience, the development of value-
    measuring systems and language, and the accultur-
    ation of civilization.
    The arts and the sciences of man, as with his habits,
    customs, and traditions, are the creative harvest of
    his perceptive and selective powers. Creativity, the
    creative process, is a choice-making process. His
    articles, constructs, and commodities, however
    marvelous to behold, deserve neither awe nor idol-
    atry, for man, not his contrivance, is earth’s own
    highest expression of the creative process.
    Human is earth’s Choicemaker. The sublime and
    significant act of choosing is, itself, the Archimedean
    fulcrum upon which man levers and redirects the
    forces of cause and effect to an elected level of qual-
    ity and diversity. Further, it orients him toward a
    natural environmental opportunity, freedom, and
    bestows earth’s title, The Choicemaker, on his
    singular and plural brow.
    Deterministic systems, ideological symbols of abdication
    by man from his natural role as earth’s Choicemaker,
    inevitably degenerate into collectivism; the negation of
    singularity, they become a conglomerate plural-based
    system of measuring human value. Blunting an awareness
    of diversity, blurring alternatives, and limiting the
    selective creative process, they are self-relegated to
    a passive and circular regression.
    Tampering with man’s selective nature endangers his
    survival for it would render him impotent and obsolete
    by denying the tools of variety, individuality,
    perception, criteria, selectivity, and progress.
    Coercive attempts produce revulsion, for such acts
    are contrary to an indeterminate nature and nature’s
    indeterminate off-spring, man the Choicemaker.
    Until the oppressors discover that wisdom only just
    begins with a respectful acknowledgment of The Creator,
    The Creation, and The Choicemaker, they will be ever
    learning but never coming to a knowledge of the truth.
    The rejection of Creator-initiated standards relegates
    the mind of man to its own primitive, empirical, and
    delimited devices. It is thus that the human intellect
    cannot ascend and function at any level higher than the
    criteria by which it perceives and measures values.
    Additionally, such rejection of transcendent criteria
    self-denies man the vision and foresight essential to
    decision-making for survival and progression. He is left,
    instead, with the redundant wreckage of expensive hind-
    sight, including human institutions characterized by
    averages, mediocrity, and regression.
    Humanism, mired in the circular and mundane egocentric
    predicament, is ill-equipped to produce transcendent
    criteria. Evidenced by those who do not perceive
    superiority and thus find themselves beset by the shifting
    winds of the carnal-ego; i.e., moods, feelings, desires,
    appetites, etc., the mind becomes subordinate: a mere
    device for excuse-making and rationalizing self-justifica-
    tion.
    The carnal-ego rejects criteria and self-discipline for such
    instruments are tools of the mind and the attitude. The
    appetites of the flesh have no need of standards for at the
    point of contention standards are perceived as alien, re-
    strictive, and inhibiting. Yet, the very survival of our
    physical nature itself depends upon a maintained sover-
    eignty of the mind and of the spirit.
    It remained, therefore, to the initiative of a personal
    and living Creator to traverse the human horizon and
    fill the vast void of human ignorance with an intelli-
    gent and definitive faith. Man is thus afforded the
    prime tool of the intellect – a Transcendent Standard
    by which he may measure values in experience, anticipate
    results, and make enlightened and visionary choices.
    Only the unique and superior God-man Person can deserved-
    ly displace the ego-person from his predicament and free
    the individual to measure values and choose in a more
    excellent way. That sublime Person was indicated in the
    words of the prophet Amos, “…said the Lord, Behold, I will
    set a plumbline in the midst of my people Israel.” Y’shua
    Mashiyach Jesus said, “If I be lifted up I will draw all men
    unto myself.”
    As long as some choose to abdicate their personal reality
    and submit to the delusions of humanism, determinism, and
    collectivism, just so long will they be subject and reacting
    only, to be tossed by every impulse emanating from others.
    Those who abdicate such reality may, in perfect justice,
    find themselves weighed in the balances of their own choosing.
    That human institution which is structured on the principle, “…all
    men are endowed by their Creator with …Liberty…,” is a system
    with its roots in the natural Order of the universe. The opponents
    of such a system are necessarily engaged in a losing contest
    with nature and nature’s God. Biblical principles are still today
    the foundation under Western Civilization and the American
    way of life. To the advent of a new season we commend the
    present generation and the “multitudes in the valley of decision.”
    Let us proclaim it. Behold!
    The Season of Generation-Choicemaker Joel 3:14 KJV
    CONTEMPORARY COMMENTS
    “I should think that if there is one thing that man has
    learned about himself it is that he is a creature of
    choice.” Richard M. Weaver
    “Man is a being capable of subduing his emotions and
    impulses; he can rationalize his behavior. He arranges
    his wishes into a scale, he chooses; in short, he acts.
    What distinguishes man from beasts is precisely that he
    adjusts his behavior deliberately.” Ludwig von Mises
    “To make any sense of the idea of morality, it must be
    presumed that the human being is responsible for his
    actions and responsibility cannot be understood apart
    from the presumption of freedom of choice.”
    John Chamberlain
    “The advocate of liberty believes that it is complementary
    of the orderly laws of cause and effect, of probability
    and of chance, of which man is not completely informed.
    It is complementary of them because it rests in part upon
    the faith that each individual is endowed by his Creator
    with the power of individual choice.”
    Wendell J. Brown
    “These examples demonstrate a basic truth — that human
    dignity is embodied in the free choice of individuals.”
    Condoleeza Rice
    “Our Founding Fathers believed that we live in an ordered
    universe. They believed themselves to be a part of the
    universal order of things. Stated another way, they
    believed in God. They believed that every man must find
    his own place in a world where a place has been made for
    him. They sought independence for their nation but, more
    importantly, they sought freedom for individuals to think
    and act for themselves. They established a republic
    dedicated to one purpose above all others – the preserva-
    tion of individual liberty…” Ralph W. Husted
    “We have the gift of an inner liberty so far-reaching
    that we can choose either to accept or reject the God
    who gave it to us, and it would seem to follow that the
    Author of a liberty so radical wills that we should be
    equally free in our relationships with other men.
    Spiritual liberty logically demands conditions of outer
    and social freedom for its completion.” Edmund A. Opitz
    “Above all I see an ability to choose the better from the
    worse that has made possible life’s progress.”
    Charles Lindbergh
    “Freedom is the Right to Choose, the Right to create for
    oneself the alternatives of Choice. Without the possibil-
    ity of Choice, and the exercise of Choice, a man is not
    a man but a member, an instrument, a thing.”
    Thomas Jefferson
    THE QUESTION AND THE ANSWER
    Q: “What is man that You are mindful of him, and the son
    of man that You visit him?” Psalm 8:4
    A: “I call heaven and earth as witnesses today against
    you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing
    and cursing; therefore choose life, that both you and
    your descendants may live.” Deuteronomy 30:19
    Q: “Lord, what is man, that You take knowledge of him?
    Or the son of man, that you are mindful of him?” Psalm
    144:3
    A: “And if it seems evil to you to serve the Lord, choose
    for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the
    gods which your fathers served that were on the other
    side of the river, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose
    land you dwell. But as for me and my house, we will
    serve the Lord.” Joshua 24:15
    Q: “What is man, that he could be pure? And he who is
    born of a woman, that he could be righteous?” Job 15:14
    A: “Who is the man that fears the Lord? Him shall He
    teach in the way he chooses.” Psalm 25:12
    Q: “What is man, that You should magnify him, that You
    should set Your heart on him?” Job 7:17
    A: “Do not envy the oppressor and choose none of his
    ways.” Proverbs 3:31
    Q: “What is man that You are mindful of him, or the son
    of man that You take care of him?” Hebrews 2:6
    A: “I have chosen the way of truth; your judgments I have
    laid before me.” Psalm 119:30 “Let Your hand become my
    help, for I have chosen Your precepts.”Psalm 119:173
    References:
    Genesis 3:3,6 Deuteronomy 11:26-28; 30:19 Job 5:23
    Isaiah 7:14-15; 13:12; 61:1 Amos 7:8 Joel 3:14
    Ecclesiastes 3:1-8
    DEDICATION
    Sir Isaac Newton
    The greatest scientist in human history
    a Bible-Believing Christian
    an authority on the Bible’s Book of Daniel
    committed to individual value
    and individual liberty
    Daniel 9:25-26 Habakkuk 2:2-3 selah
    “What is man…?” Earth’s Choicemaker Psalm 25:12
    http://www.blogger.com/profile/4744267
    http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/2728/
    http://www.choicemaker.net/
    jbaxter@choicemaker.net
    An old/new paradigma – Mr. Jefferson would agree!
    (Alternative? There is no alternative.)
    + + +
    “Man cannot make or invent or contrive principles. He
    can only discover them and he ought to look through the
    discovery to the Author.” — Thomas Paine 1797
    “Got Criteria?” See Psalm 119:1-176
    semper fidelis
    Jim Baxter
    Sgt. USMC
    WWII & Korean War
    Teacher, 5th Grade – 30 Wonderful years !
    vincit veritas

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