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Tuesday, June 12, 2007 | Reason : Political | print version Print | Comments

Document PBS Revelation: Network's 'Wall Of Separation' Has Religious Right Genesis

by Barry W Lynn, Talk to Action

Thanks to Mark Richards for the link.

Reposted from:
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2007/6/11/1582/77690

authorWe are honored to welcome guest front pager Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. This piece is crossposted from the Wall of Separation blog. - FC

I like PBS. I really do. So I'm deeply troubled about a church-state program being rolled out on the network this month.

"The Wall of Separation" is a production of Boulevard Pictures, a California outfit that describes itself as "a motion picture production company committed to bringing moviegoers high-quality stories from the world's most innovative filmmakers--films that bring hope, inspire us to the good, and that show us what the human spirit can attain."

But there seems to be more there than meets the eye.

Promotional material for the program at the Boulevard Web site suggests that it promotes a radically revisionist view of church and state.

"The Wall of Separation is a metaphor deeply embedded in the American consciousness," the company observes. "Most of us take for granted the idea that politics and religion should not be intermixed because of the heritage of The First Amendment in our understanding of freedom of religion. The No Establishment Clause has protected us from the entanglement of religion with government, and the Free Exercise Clause has secured the right for all faiths to engage in their religious practices without interference from the state. America is a religiously pluralistic culture guided by a secular government."
That sounds pretty good. But then the Boulevard promo takes a troubling turn.

"...[W]hat would surprise most Americans," it asserts, "is the discovery that this is not what the Founding Fathers of our country intended when they established our nation and wrote the Constitution and Bill of Rights. They in fact had a radically different definition of establishment and the role of religion in state and federal governments than we do today. So radical, in fact, that some say the modern understanding of the role of religion in the public square is exactly the opposite of what the Founders intended."

So Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and others among the nation's founders didn't intend a "religiously pluralistic culture guided by a secular government"? That's totally wrong and very much in keeping with the Religious Right's spin on America's founding.
We at Americans United did a little research on Boulevard Pictures, and here's what we found. Although the Web site for the film company mentions no religious or political agenda, its president is Jack Hafer, an evangelical Christian who told one interviewer that Christians have an obligation to "shape the culture" and "spread the faith." He urged Christian young people to go into the arts as "kingdom-spreaders" and as "a form of missionary service."

That doesn't sound too bad. Christians have a right to proselytize. But I don't usually expect to see proselytism on PBS.

And then there's Brian Godawa, the writer and director of "The Wall of Separation," who is an even more interesting character. Godawa did movie reviews for a time for the Chalcedon Foundation's Web site. Those of you who follow religion and politics will recognize Chalcedon as the nerve center of Christian Reconstructionism, the most militant wing of the Religious Right. Godawa also was a featured speaker at the American Vision's "2006 Worldview Super Conference," a Reconstructionist event.

Reconstructionists detest democracy and hope to usher in a fundamentalist Christian theocracy in America based on their reading of biblical law. They are best known for seeking to impose the harshest penalties of the Old Testament penal code: the death penalty, for example, for gays, adulterers, fornicators, witches, incorrigible teenagers and those who spread false religions.

I don't know if Godawa calls himself a Reconstructionist - his reviews have been removed from Chalcedon's Web site -- but his perspective is definitely pretty far out.
His Chalcedon review of the critically acclaimed movie, "Brokeback Mountain," calls it "a brilliant piece of subversive homosexual propaganda." By depicting gay men as "manly" instead of "fey queens," he said, "It's the normalization of the freakish minority." He charged that "homosexualism" is "an ideology and religion whose goal is to overthrow the Christian paradigm of morality."

Godawa added, "Society SHOULD suppress immoral behavior and it does so on many fronts. So if homosexualism is immoral, then yes, it should be suppressed, just like child molesting, its ugly step-brother hidden in the closet, just like adultery, just like promiscuity."

Tell us what you really think, Brian!

Godawa praised Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" and urged Christians to see the movie in droves in the first two weeks - "Don't go by yourself, get a group of friends. And don't go just once, go twice."- so other studios would "sit up and take notice."

He dismissed criticism of the film's anti-Semitic undercurrent. "[T]he accusations are vacuous," he said. "In fact, they are more revealing of the attackers' state of the heart than the filmaker's work of art." He blasted as "slanderous" the criticism from Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League that the film unambiguously portrays Jewish authorities and the Jewish mob as responsible for the decision to crucify of Jesus.

"Foxman, and others like him, appear to be more concerned about cultivating their own preconceived cultural history than historical accuracy. Damn the facts, full speed ahead. Imagine the Jewish activist outrage that would occur if an Egyptian leader said about the film `The Ten Commandments,' `The film unambiguously portrays Egyptian authorities and the Egyptian mob as the ones responsible for the decision to enslave Jews.' Well, if the sandal fits." (Godawa later says the Romans were responsible too.)

I wish I could say PBS had the wool pulled over its eyes about this, but I can't. I wrote to officials there about our concerns March 16, 2006, and got a letter back six days later saying "The Wall of Separation" is "neither currently distributed by PBS, nor have we received a proposal from Gummshoe Productions to consider it for distribution." (Gummshoe was the name Shafer and Godawa were operating under back then.)

When Godawa continued to tell fans that PBS was going to distribute the program, I wrote to PBS again. My March 30, 2007, letter asked again what's going on. This time, the news wasn't so good. In an April 18 response, PBS Vice President John F. Wilson conceded that the program "was submitted, reviewed and accepted for distribution through PBS Plus, a service that provides stations with programs they may schedule locally to supplement the PBS primetime national schedule." Wilson defended the decision to promote the program as serving "our mandate to present a diversity of viewpoints on issues of public importance." He said the PBS letter denying involvement came before "Wall of Separation" had been submitted to PBS.

Maybe so. But Godawa had been crowing about PBS involvement with the project long before the 2006 PBS letter to us. If he knew they were going to pick the program up, why didn't they know it?

The "diversity of viewpoints" argument doesn't wash either. This project smacks of covert Religious Right propaganda, not a forthright contribution to the national dialogue.

None of us at Americans United has seen "The Wall of Separation;" PBS declined to share a copy with us. So we can't say for sure that it's all bad. But many signs indicate that it may be an intentionally warped and inaccurate view of the role of religion in our nation's founding.

Ironically, the program apparently includes clips of interviews with me and distinguished constitutional law professor Erwin Chemerinsky. Chemerinsky and I are featured on the Boulevard Web site's trailer. (Comments from ACLU President Nadine Strossen are reportedly on the program, too.) Since we haven't seen "The Wall of Separation," we aren't sure of the source of the clips or their context. (I do lots of interviews with would-be documentarians.) But this makes it all the more imperative that civil liberties advocates not regard the "The Wall of Separation" as something endorsed by me and other church-state separationists.

PBS, I'm afraid you've let me down. I'll still watch "Teletubbies," but it just won't be the same.

Comments 1 - 14 of 14 |

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1. Comment #49617 by heafnerj on June 12, 2007 at 3:35 pm

 avatarFine, just air Root of All Evil and I'll be happy.

Other Comments by heafnerj

2. Comment #49624 by pewkatchoo on June 12, 2007 at 3:49 pm

 avatarIf this continues, I see America heading inexorably into civil strife.

Other Comments by pewkatchoo

3. Comment #49625 by k1mgy on June 12, 2007 at 3:54 pm

 avatarThis work is reported to suggest that the US should really be a theocracy, this despite not an inkling of evidence of such in the original foundation documents and writings. Are the producers the same folks who brought us the "Creation Museum" who say "Don't think - have faith"?

Apparently the current US Mal-administration gets to score one: all the ideologues that have been installed at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting should be turning out something for their paychecks.

The board of this once balanced and forthright institution includes the current chair, Cheryl Halpern, who was installed after Kenneth Y. Tomlinson, a religious wack job and partisan, was ousted after a long painful scream of public opinion when Tomlinson tried to silence some of PBS's best known voices. Halpern is more partisan than religious (although undoubtedly she meets that qualification, too). Her experience at the US propaganda arm the Voice of America are one plus, but surely her being a major fund-raiser for the current US mal-administrator is really what got her a place at the public feed troth.

Other partisan republicans appointed by the current Mal-administrator include Gay Hart Gaines who is the "vice" chair, and Warren Bell, a real gem. Bell was rejected by the Senate and got in using the "recess appointment" tactic used by the mal-administrator to maintain the high level of quality and integrity that the US government brings. Who cares what the US Congress (the people) have to say when you're "The Decider".

Bell has, according to critics, a documented series of racist, homophobic, and anti-women remarks and, "no discernible relevant achievement, involvement or commitment to public broadcasting", according to an NPR spokesperson. A good fit. Bell is an analog to the former UN ambassador from the current US mal-administration, John Bolton. Bolton wanted to dismantle the UN. Bell wanted to dismantle PBS, NPR and CPB.

Claudia Puig (easy to misspell) is another Republican, appointed by the current mal-administrator. Also on the board is Chris Boskin, a Republican with less of a sordid past.

Two democrats, Ernest J. Wilson III (nominated by President Clinton) and former Senator David H. Pryor sit on the board.

Stack enough hacks and partisans into publicly-funded organizations and their proud past and achievements will be pushed aside for the "greater good": propping up the current US mal-administration and their odd and dangerous theocratic leanings.

Note: the film producers only want to "make a difference" in the culture. This is the same mantra from another Haggardist, David Kirkpatrick, who is attempting to bring "Good News Holdings" (aka religious propaganda film company) to Massachusetts:

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2007/06/06/faith_based_fare_may_get_made_in_mass_tag/


Other Comments by k1mgy

4. Comment #49655 by Dr Benway on June 12, 2007 at 7:07 pm

 avatarThis is the most depressing thing I've read in months.

How difficult is it to immigrate to Iceland?

Other Comments by Dr Benway

5. Comment #49700 by sornord on June 13, 2007 at 2:51 am

The Passion was the most boring movie I've seen in decades!

Other Comments by sornord

6. Comment #49703 by Corylus on June 13, 2007 at 3:15 am

 avatarI believe you Sornord - films are always boring when you know what happens at the end ;)

Other Comments by Corylus

7. Comment #49721 by Dr Benway on June 13, 2007 at 6:40 am

 avatarI've respected PBS for it's variety of sources and calm debate. If it becomes just another pawn of corporate and government propagandists, what's left?

I've just started Al Gore's book, The Assault on Reason. He illustrates how mass media subverts rational thought by repeatedly associating ideas together without argument. Thus we have a majority of Americans who believe Saddam Hussein was involved with 9/11. Most people don't think deeply enough about the link to develop a rationalization for it; they just feel the link is there.

He gives an example from a state-level campaign against a popular rival. His PR people studied poll results and recommended he put out an ad expressing certain ideas. They predicted his rival would respond with an ad saying certain things, and they told him if he bought so many minutes of air time for a rebuttal ad he would jump ahead 8.5 points in the polls. Amazingly, everything happened exactly as predicted.

Once associations are made on an emotional level, particularly if there's some anxiety involved, reason takes a back seat. We're all vulnerable to such manipulations. Smart people can invent reasons to justify their gut feelings, and so can fool themselves into believing they're above the groupthink. We have to be mindful of this.

It's quite chilling to realize that votes today are bought and sold. The US Senate floor has a lot of empty seats now. Fundraising to support 30 second ads does more for a senator's cause than reasoned debate among colleagues.

Other Comments by Dr Benway

8. Comment #49726 by thirdchimpanzee on June 13, 2007 at 7:11 am

As a long time subscriber to PBS I'm heartbroken to see how the institution has been not only neutered but brought fully to heel by the right wing. Living in Seattle, we can also pick up the Canadian public broadcast station (CBC), which aired "Root of all Evil?" in September. Perhaps we could persuade more regional cable organisations to carry CBC, over time the CBC would recognise that it had a significant American audience watching as well. I've seen the reverse situation where border PBS stations have gathered equal support from Canadian audiences.

North America needs an effective public broadcaster that has sufficient funding and a strong enough tradition of independence to be an honest standard for news and documentaries. We can't continue to rely on Jon Stewart and "The Daily Show" for this vital task!

Other Comments by thirdchimpanzee

10. Comment #49756 by 3legcat on June 13, 2007 at 8:59 am

i saw Wall of Separation last night on my local PBS station.

this documentary asserts that the founding fathers were deeply religious christians who never intended to prohibit the states from adopting official religions, that any discouragement at the federal level had to do with a general discouragement of the fed getting involved with state issues and that the "wall of separation" quote in jefferson's letter to the danbury baptists was taken way out of context in the supreme court rulings of the 1940's.

furthermore it claims that jefferson was a deeply religious christian with unusual thoughts on the trinity, only briefly mentions thomas paine once, and suggests that deism was merely the fashion of the day. they do back up these claims with a good deal of the "fathers" own words.

even if all the claims of this documentary proved true, what difference does it make? i don't give a rat's ass what the founding fathers intended, they were slave holders, did they intend federal slavery? maybe, who cares?. pluralism, free exercise, and no establishment are widely embraced notions that protect citizens from their government. build up that wall.

Other Comments by 3legcat

11. Comment #49759 by konquererz on June 13, 2007 at 9:14 am

 avatarPlease, I'm sure they failed to put in the quotes between Jefferson and Adams in which they take turns in different letters talking about how silly Christianity is! Our founding fathers quotes in public seem to be seriously different than their private quotes in letters to friends. It would seem that our founding fathers did the politician thing and "play the part" while really despising most of religion. This is spoken to by the laws they made, the quotes in private letters, and the friends they kept, especially the likes of Thomas Paine! To believe that our founding fathers truly wanted a theocracy is to be completely ignorant of American History, you must believe what ever you are told and ignore the most blatant of lies and stretch what little quotes they have and take smaller quotes out of context in order to believe that! When will Americans stop being so utterly stupid! We fall behind in Math and science then continue to support this ludicrous theology of the religious right, and no one in the country seems to care! ARRRRGGGG!

Pant! Pant! Calm down K, you care. And this video is just another assault on logic, reason, and history that has to be dealt with by all of us. We must keep banging the drum, as I will no doubt have to straighten my old friends and family out after the all watch this. I'm sure their pastor has already told them to watch it. Time to beef up on the history and put on the gloves again! Damn the Torpedo's! Full speed ahead!

Other Comments by konquererz

12. Comment #49774 by Steven Mading on June 13, 2007 at 11:59 am

People are entitled to make up their own opinions, but they aren't entitled to make up their own facts.

I haven't seen this show yet (hasn't aired yet) but I have seen the argument made by others many times before, and the way they make the argument is by making up their own facts. It's truly disgusting for two reasons - the first of which is that it's disgusting to invent revisionist history (and thus falsify information for generations of future people) to promote an agenda, but also there's the fact that human morality has gotten more mature since the late 1700's so even if their falsified version of history was correct that still would not be a good reason to go to a theocracy today. You'll notice nobody's out there making the argument that we should go back to having slavery based on the fact that the founding fathers kept slaves.

Other Comments by Steven Mading

13. Comment #49794 by Esterson on June 13, 2007 at 1:18 pm

On the subject of PBS, it has a website dedicated to the promotion of the claims that Einstein's first wife Mileva Maric co-authored his epoch-making 1905 papers:
http://www.pbs.org/opb/einsteinswife/

The "Einstein's Wife" documentary being promoted by PBS has been described by John Stachel, founding editor of the Albert Einstein Collected Papers project, as a "whole series of entangled falsehoods," and the historian of physics Gerald Holton wrote that "if such a false product were published by a scientist, he or she would be deprived of eligibility of further funding."
http://www.butterfliesandwheels.com/articleprint.php?num=201

Nevertheless PBS continues to maintain its grossly misleading "Einstein's Wife" website, and its equally misleading Lesson Plans for school students, despite their being riddled with errors and misconceptions, and despite its own Ombudsman's view that the website should be shut down pending a scholarly assessment:
http://tinyurl.com/36gx9e

Other Comments by Esterson

14. Comment #49868 by Beachbum on June 14, 2007 at 1:18 am

 avatarAnnals of American History, Britannica Encyclopedia, 33 volumes of the letters between the founding fathers and continuing to current leaders. I highly recommend them.

Other Comments by Beachbum
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