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CHRISTIAN RIGHT SETS UP SHOP
Reprinted from homosexual newspaper, Capital Xtra
ANALYSIS
Welcome to post-SSM trench warfare
Gareth Kirkby / Capital Xtra
Thursday, July 14, 2005Something changed in Canada during
the national debate over same-sex marriage. We now live in
a new period of religious anger. Of extremist rhetoric. Of
evangelical absolutism. Our community needs to get ready for
US-style trench warfare as a new generation of religious Canadians
start to flex their still weak, but growing, muscles in the
public square.
A sleeping giant has been awoken by Canada's debate about
same-sex civil marriage rights: the Christian right. Their
engagement in the political arena threatens to change a lot
in Canadian politics over the next generation. Perhaps - if
we don't figure out how to deal with this - this emerging
religious extremism will wreak the same havoc upon civil debate
in this country as in the US, where religious extremists hijacked
the Republican party and re-wrote the nation's agenda in biblical
terms.
It's new for us. Canadian fundamentalists had largely disengaged
from politics over the past two decades as they became increasingly
alienated by the pluralistic and secular nature of Canada
since the Charter Of Rights And Freedoms began playing its
magical tune in our society. But the idea of gays getting
to use the term "marriage" to describe their sinful
relationships - well, that got their attention, and with it
their voices, money and even bodies for demonstrations. And
it also gained them the support of those US fundamentalists,
who have been pouring money and resources into the Canadian
fight.
Just 10 weeks ago, some 8,000 people converged on Parliament
carrying signs trumpeting their religious beliefs and challenging
the separation of church and state. Same-sex marriage for
many of these extremists was proof that the decadent rot of
city cores was threatening to spread outward to their suburbs,
towns and farms and contaminate their holy families. It wasn't
about equal rights at all, they insisted, it was about moving
away from God and inviting His wrath to rain down upon this
nation. Meanwhile, evangelicals and socially conservative
Catholics organized to ensure their choice candidates won
Conservative Party nominations in Nova Scotia and British
Columbia.
Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper has reached out to
social conservatives in other religious and in all minority
communities. True, the vicious strategy has produced only
mixed results: some Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist and even Christian
groups expressed outrage at Harper's assumptions that their
cultures were homophobic; some groups even came out in public
support of same-sex marriage, understanding that the same
Charter that protects queers from discrimination also protects
visible, cultural and religious minorities. While their response
tempts me to a rendition of Solidarity Forever, I'd be dreaming
in technicolour. Fact is, Harper hit a chord of approval among
bigots within minority cultures just as surely as he hits
a chord with bigots within the dominant cultures. And maybe
that's his real strategy: to split minority communities politically,
to peel away social conservatives from their minority community's
bloc vote for the Liberal and NDP parties.
There's more to the political fallout than a political re-alignment
of minority communities. Focus On The Family, for example
- the extremist "family values" organization headquartered
in Colorado Springs, Colorado - poured millions of dollars
into Canada in a blatant attempt to influence our political
agenda by derailing Bill C-38. They set up shop on Parliament
Hill for the duration of the bill's debate, and say they've
now grown roots and will stay right there. And they're spending
$280,000 to create the Canadian Centre For Marriage And Family.
That's scary stuff for all of us who believe in the separation
of church and state. But there's more: a new think-tank, one
that its supporters hope will do for social conservatism what
Vancouver's Fraser Institute did for economic conservatism
and globalization. The Fraser Institute was viewed as wacky
and extremist in its early days. Two decades later it's quoted
almost daily in newspapers and sees its perspective enshrined
in law and government policy throughout the nation.
"Canada's religious right is preparing to launch a social
policy think-tank aimed at promoting traditionalist values
that have been coaxed to the fore by the recent same-sex marriage
debate," noted the Ottawa Citizen on May 26. The Institute
For Canadian Values is backed by some of the most vigorous
opponents of Bill C-38, charming people like Charles McVety,
president of Canada Christian College, and Joseph Ben-Ami,
formerly of the B'nai Brith, but now dedicated to putting
us in our place.
In the last six months, we've seen the Evangelical Fellowship
Of Canada organize a mass letter campaign to convince politicians
to oppose Bill C-38. Perhaps you answered the phone one day
to get a message instructing you to call your MP right away
to try and stop the legislation? Ministers distorted the truth
about the bill in their pulpit rhetoric. Bishops and priests
instructed good Catholics to get active in opposing the legislation.
Christian
conservatives are re-engaging in the political process. And
many of them have found their leader in Tristan Emmanuel,
an evangelical who founded, and now works full-time for, an
organization called Equipping Christians For Public Life.
Christians have too long concentrated on saving souls and
ignoring the public square, he told the Globe and Mail Jun
13. Emmanuel believes that Jesus commands Christians to be
politically engaged, "to focus on the next election."
He's
not homophobic, he explains. But he does see homosexuals as
"sexual deviants." And, he says, "tolerance
doesn't mean that we'll shut up, zip up and go away. And tolerance
doesn't mean we'll stop being political and use the democratic
process to gain the upper hand, influence society and see
the dawn of civility return to America or Canada.
"Charming.
And a glimpse of the future. Just imagine how hard it will
be to get through future legislation on issues important to
gays and lesbians, bisexuals and trans people. How much harder
will we have to work to put shackles on Customs to stop them
from targetting our books and bookstores? How much more difficult
will it be to amend the sex laws to fully legalize bathhouses
and ensure our youth have the right to choose how and when
they express their sexuality? How much more troublesome will
it be to amend Bill C-2 in future to add better protection
for artists and writers doing work about coming out?
Can you
imagine the battle about to take shape over allowing prostitutes
to safely practice their trade? Imagine how these people will
react to the idea of trans rights and a discussion about the
artificial gender lines that our society has drawn and policed.
How about marijuana laws? And how long before they start pressuring
for changes to abortion laws, such as removing it from the
list of medical procedures covered by health care? I can hardly
wait for their future battles to get more socially conservative
judges on the Supreme Court Of Canada. And just imagine the
rhetoric we'll encounter as we try and get gay curriculum
content and anti-homophobia education in the public school
system.
The landscape of Canadian debate is being re-engineered
by social conservatives on a scale we haven't experienced
here for decades. US groups are setting up shop here and Canadian
groups are adopting US-style confrontational activism.
Truly,
it bears asking: was Bill C-38 worth the pain we'll all face
in the future? Not because we ought be afraid of political
backlashes - that fear was the silent call of the closet,
of shame, in past times. But because there's still lots to
be accomplished, much that could have been accomplished without
re-awakening this giant of religious reactionary politics.
And now we may spend decades fighting rearguard actions against
evangelicals and others who think they have a direct connection
to what is Right and what is Wrong, thanks to personal conversations
with their Gods.
They're here, they're angry, get used to it.
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