or; I hope this tool doesn't get the nomination.
Mike Huckabee is a bigot, and he and his campaign are playing to the bigotry of the people of Iowa in order to garner support in the state.
Why do I say that? In his ads running in the state, he is clearly defined as a Christian leader. Why is this bigotry? Let's turn to my friend/arch nemesis Charles Krauthammer to discover exactly why . . .
Huckabee is running a very effective ad in Iowa about religion. "Faith doesn't just influence me," he says on camera, "it really defines me." The ad then hails him as a "Christian leader."
Forget the implications of the idea that being a "Christian leader" is some special qualification for the presidency of a country whose Constitution (Article VI) explicitly rejects any religious test for office.
Just imagine that Huckabee were running one-on-one in Iowa against Joe Lieberman. (It's a thought experiment. Stay with me.) If he had run the same ad in those circumstances, it would have raised an outcry. The subtext — who's the Christian in this race? — would have been too obvious to ignore, the appeal to bigotry too clear.
Well, Huckabee is running against Romney (the other GOP candidates are non-factors in Iowa), and he knows that many Christian conservatives, particularly those who have an affinity with Huckabee's highly paraded evangelical Christianity, consider Romney's faith a decidedly non-Christian cult.
What a true statement! If he ran as a "Christian leader" against a Jew as mentioned, or hell, let's even say a Catholic, public outcry would be huge. But for a Mormon? Who gives a damn, they're all cultists anyway!
Let's turn back to a few other comments from Krauthammer, who, while I rarely agree with him, I've always respected him:
Huckabee has been asked about this view that Mormonism is a cult. He dodges and dances. "If I'm invited to be the president of a theological school, that'll be a perfectly appropriate question," he says, "but to be the president of the United States, I don't know that that's going to be the most important issue that I'll be facing when I'm sworn in."
Hmmm. So it is an issue, Huckabee avers. But not a very important one.
And he's not going to pronounce upon it. Nice straddle, leaving the question unanswered and still open — the kind of maneuver one comes to expect from slick former governors of Arkansas lusting for the presidency.
And by Huckabee's own logic, since he is not running for head of a theological college, what is he doing proclaiming himself a "Christian leader" in an ad promoting himself for president? Answer: Having the issue every which way. Seeming to take the high road of tolerance by refusing to declare Mormonism a cult, indeed declaring himself above the issue — yet clearly playing to that prejudice by leaving the question ambiguous, while making sure everyone knows that he, for one, is a "Christian leader."
So there you go. Blatant, painful hypocrisy by the Evangelical "Golden Boy". Attach this to whip's article, titled Rapists and Rockstars Heart Huckabee, and we begin to see just how disingenuous this guy is.
I certainly hope he doesn't get the presidential nomination from the Republicans. It would be a grave mistake. I'm reminded of the words of Sinclair Lewis, in his inimitable It Can't Happen Here (Nobel-prize winning literature, folks):
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross."
(For the rest of Krauthammer's article, read it here.)