By David K. Shipler
If
America has a state religion, the historian Robert Kelley used to say, it is
constitutional democracy. Among all the rancorous arguments across the American
spectrum, no compelling bid to abandon the Constitution can be heard. No
rhetorical attack on democracy is made. No threat to the nation, no fear of
insecurity provokes such apostasy.
Even those who would undermine the
Constitution, including the Capitol rioters, have acted in its name. Thus did
Donald Trump’s appeals to “stop the steal” of the election intone the mantra of
democracy, not the authoritarian rule he was attempting to install. Democracy
was hailed by rioters who believed that they were fighting to defend it even as
their insurrection moved to take it down.
That profound hypocrisy becomes
less puzzling when Constitutional democracy is seen as religious. For religion can
be perverted. It can be rationalized into destruction, as a world full of
religious violence has witnessed. A creed can be selectively interpreted, twisted
to fit parochial interests, and ignited as a call to arms. A religion’s righteous
purity can be contaminated with hatred, which is then fueled by religion’s
righteous certainty. No secular reasoning can rebut the divine inspiration, the
holy cause. If it is for good, then that is good. But it is not always so.
American democracy is often elevated
with religious language: “sacred,” “desecrate,” “temple.” Both sides in the
Capitol invasion of January 6 used the terms. The lone police officer who tried
to coax rioters out of the Senate chamber said
gently, “Just want to let you guys know, this is the sacredest place.”
As the mobs roamed the halls
searching for legislators to kidnap or kill, Trump tweeted,
“These are the things and events that happen when a sacred landslide election
victory is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away from great
patriots. . . . Remember this day forever!”
Once the Senate was taken back, Senator Dick
Durbin declared on the floor: “This is a sacred place. But this sacred place
was desecrated by a mob today on our watch. This temple to democracy was
defiled by thugs, who roamed the halls — sat in that chair, Mr. Vice President
— one that you vacated at 2:15 this afternoon.”
President Biden, in his inaugural address, hailed the survival of democracy against those who sought “to drive us from this sacred ground.”
These are not mere metaphors. They
are words of devotion. They are statements of reverence that strike a chord
with people’s need to believe in something bigger than themselves. For many
secular Americans, that something is the state religion of constitutional
democracy.
“Democratic” is an abused term
around the globe. Among authoritarian regimes are the Democratic Republic of Congo,
the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, the Federal Democratic Republic of
Ethiopia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, and the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea.
There is a risk of abuse in the
United States as well. “Democracy” has become a facile term among certain Americans,
too. It is an empty platitude like “God” and “Jesus” to some who practice
immorality. They include those in the religious right who piously embraced
Trump as a God-given savior while he separated immigrant children from their
parents, sped last-minute executions, stirred hateful racism, and the like.
The extreme right has also forged
an amalgam of Christian and democratic symbols to fortify their un-Christian,
undemocratic agenda. As the “great patriots” moved to storm the Capitol, at
least one man was seen in The New Yorker’s
video
raising a Bible above his head. Some in the mob flew Crusader flags.
At the Senate dais, where Vice President Mike
Pence had presided, a long-haired man who seemed in religious ecstasy raised
his fist, looked upward toward the heavens, and shouted: “Jesus Christ, we
invoke your name. Amen!” A chorus of “Amen” came from the other rioters.
Then Jacob Anthony Chansley,
shirtless and wearing a bearskin headdress with horns, picked up the theme, announcing
from the dais through an electric megaphone, “Let’s all say a prayer.”
He yelled loud enough to be heard
in heaven: “Thank you, Heavenly Father, for giving us this opportunity. Thank you,
Heavenly Father, for giving us the opportunity to stand up for our God-given
rights, our inalienable rights . . . We will not allow the American way, America,
to go down. Thank you for allowing the United States of America to be reborn. Thank
you for allowing us to get rid of the communists and globalists and traitors
within our government. We love you and we thank you, in Christ’s holy name we
pray.”
The man who had prayed first held both hands out, open palms, eyes closed, head bowed, seemingly transported. He raised his hands toward the ceiling, shouted, “Yes! Yes!” and clenched his fists. A lusty cheer of “Amen!” rose from the small crowd that occupied the Senate chamber, a chant for a false prophet.
I love that guy - Jacob Anthony Chansley - in the bare-chest outfit with the feathers & horns! I mean I do think he deserves some kind of award for Most Outstanding Outfit! - or Most Dramatic, perhaps, even Most Artistic. He definitely added color to the scene - though of course it's really not funny at all - except for him! I have to confess to getting a big kick out of him - with his "War Paint" and spear. And thanks for giving us his words - I appreciate knowing what he said now. But, to set the record straight, I did not get a big kick out of the event - which I watched unfold in real time and found sad and shameful and shocking - of course. I personally believe that Thump should be marched to the guillatine - as would befit the True Traitor to our Great Country that he has shown us and the world that he is!!! I also feel that anyone who voted for Thump should be given some kind of American National Demerit! - for having very, very poor judgment which would include remarkable deafness, dumbness & blindness as to ability to assess proper character for a president of our great Democracy!!
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