It is difficult to have an intelligent conversation with
somebody who wants a holiday which falls in the fall to be called the
"mid-spring break"…
Fox News’ Todd Starnes, who I believe has the unfortunate role of being the male version of the appallingly clueless Elisabeth Hasselbeck, got together with Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council the other day to talk about the terrible persecution of Christians in this country.
What has them so riled up? New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s decision Wednesday
to put two Muslim holidays on the school calendar: Eid al-Adha and Eid
al-Fitr. New York City is not the first city to do this, but it is the
biggest.
The news had predictable results: rights for Muslims means persecution of Christians.
Tony Perkins: But yet when it comes
to Christmas and Easter, two very prominent Christian holidays, they’re
not on the school calendar, they’re called ‘winter break’ and ‘spring
break.’
Todd Starnes: Oh yes. For the sake
of tolerance and diversity, that normally means the Christians are going
to be discriminated against or their holidays are going to be
minimalized.
Starnes told Perkins that one of the holidays (Eid
al-Fitr) falls during the summer and so “will only impact kids going to
summer school.”
And Right Wing Watch’s Brian Tashman helpfully pointed out that,
Easter always falls on a Sunday, which would explain why it is not on a school vacation calendar, while Christmas does in fact appear on New York City’s list of school holidays [PDF]. The city’s schools are also closed for Good Friday, along with the Jewish holy days of Yom Kippur, Rosh Hashanah and Passover.
Why didn’t the two complain that those Jewish holy days persecute Christians? Well, because Jews aren’t Muslims.
Instead, Hasselbeck-like, Starnes went on to
complain, “For the sake of tolerance and diversity and inclusivity,
don’t you think they should rename it something else, like mid-spring
break or something like that?
Never mind that Eid al-Adha falls on September 24, which is not in the spring.
Which led to this exchange:
Tony Perkins: If they’re going to
be consistent. When 85 percent of the population identifies as Christian
but we can’t have a Christmas holiday because it’s religious but yet we
can have Muslim holidays, something is not right there in New York
City, in ‘The Big Apple,’ something is rotten.
Todd Starnes: You’re absolutely
right, Tony. And how many times have we seen this, where the Islamic
faith is being given accommodation and the Christian faith and other
faiths, quite frankly, are being marginalized. Not just in the public
work space but also through the Obama administration.
Tony Perkins: I think the Obama administration has created the environment for policies such as this.
But he’s not. He’s wrong. So is Todd Starnes, who, as The Friendly Atheist is more than happy to point out at Patheos, makes a career out of “making sh*t up.”
First of all about how many Christians there are. In fact, only 77 percent
of Americans, not 85 percent, still self-identify as Christian as of
2012 (as it has been falling for years, the percentage is certainly
smaller today).
Protestants haven’t been a majority since 2012 and fully one in five Americans is unaffiliated. In 2012, that was 46 million people who were categorized as “nones.”
And alarming as it is that anyone would want to do this in the face of the Constitution’s direct prohibition, only 57 percent
of Republicans – barely more than half – want to make Christianity the
state religion of the United States. At this point, it’s a relief to
discover that almost half of Republicans are still loyal Americans. It’s
not as bad as I thought.
In fact, I’m downright encouraged.
Finally, here’s a startler for you: specifically white Christians, the Tony Perkins type, are no longer a majority in 19 U.S. states.
Another point to be made here is this pretend
concern for “other faiths,” which Starnes and other conservatives are
only too happy, as professed Christians, to themselves marginalize.
And their argument can be turned around: they
complain that if Christmas is called ‘winter break,’ and that therefore a
Muslim holiday should be “mid-spring break,” but if, as they insist,
Christmas is Christmas, why are they objecting to Eid al-Adha being
called Eid al-Adha?
If they’re opposed, can’t we start talking right now about a “war on Eid al-Adha”?
And please, let’s not pretend that if it were called
something other than Eid al-Adha that Perkins and Starnes would not
still be complaining, because a Muslim holy day would still be the
reason for the holiday.
Here’s the problem in a nutshell: The New York Times
quotes Ibrahim Hooper, spokesperson for the Council on American-Islamic
Relations (CAIR), as saying, “When these holidays are recognized, it’s a
sign that Muslims have a role in the political and social fabric of
America.”
Just ask Pamela Geller:
“What do all of these disparate players – Obama, de Blasio, Sharpton,
CAIR – have in common? A shared goal: the destruction of America.”
The Republican obsession with CAIR borders on the
pathological, ironically proving, more than ever, that CAIR serves a
vital function in this country.
Yet it is less CAIR here than the reality of Muslims
“having a role.” Perkins and Starnes (and Geller) don’t want Muslims to
have any role. They don’t want Muslims to be here at all, to have First
Amendment Rights period, let alone any influence.
There is no persecution of Christians in
America, and granting equal rights to other religions is not an attack
on Christians unless, like Perkins and Starnes, you interpret Religious
Freedom to mean “freedom for Christians only.”
The First Amendment says we all have equal religious
freedoms and unless and until traitors like Perkins and Starnes
overthrow the Constitution, it will remain that way.
Can I get an amen?
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