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cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-02-2006 01:05

Some ideas that have been swirling around:

Many civics educators would maintain they present an objective survey of the American political system. Or German, or whichever country one lives in. However although denominational religion is oftentimes reduced to a research variable and equated to other socio-political factors such as ethnicity, economic status, or gender. However the other and more subtle religion presented is a civil religion. It pervades textbooks, political science classes, and government in general.

For example: although an educator might decry government-supported denominational religion, they oftentimes will give credit to American exceptionalism, give overly-due recognition to national holidays, use specific words (e.g. heroic, sacrifice) to refer to American wars and war heroes. or present democracy with a certain reverence that goes beyond definition and application. The totality of these concepts would comprise a civil religion defined by Robert Bellah as: "an institutionalized collection of sacred beliefs about the American nation." It's pretty obvious what these "sacred beliefs" are.

The benefits of a civil religion are obvious as well. It would theoretically foster patriotic sentiment and civic piety. Some would argue that political homogeneity (favorable views of politics in general) is contingent to a strong civil religion. Modern civil religion also espouses the ideals of civil rights and liberties.

However it is also strong connected to other ideas: free-market economics (Nash, Falwell), on two sides: the extension or retention of civil liberties to unpopular groups (dependent conservative/liberal), legitimation of political leaders (Memorial Day speeches, pomp and circumstance of inauguration day ceremonies, the American eagle, etc), and group homogeneity (American exceptionalism).

The problem is how the civil religion is so inexorably intertwined with the American political system. While not a religion per se it retains many aspects of religion - both good and bad. Therefore in performing the functions of a religion has the vast potential of religion: specifically in the legitimization of action and preserving an identity. Two countries with high civil religiosity (in my approximation) would be Iran and America. In one example we see the civil religion acting to validate totalitarian leadership, anti-Semitic rhetoric, and religious intolerance. In the other we see civil religion acting to validate a liberal democracy, American exceptionalism (the "city on a hill," a "new Jerusalem"), Enlightenment philosophies, but also very conservative ideas such as free-market economics, imperialism, primarily-Republican presidents (Reagan, Nixon - the only studies I could find found high correlations between civil religiosity and voting tendencies), and religious piety.

In my opinion, and this was what I wanted to discuss, civil religion should be abolished from American society politics; we need a "wall of separation" between the government and the people to protect against the a transcendent national religion. If groups cannot find homogeneity without national overtones, they should find none. Political leaders should be banned from invoking the symbols of American civil religion (World War II, MLK, etc) in a transcendent manner. For this reason civil religion should be recognized alongside denominational religion for the very reasons a wall of separation exists to separate politics from denominational religion.

(Edited by cfb on 11-02-2006 01:07)

JKMabry
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: raht cheah
Insane since: Aug 2000

posted posted 11-02-2006 05:52
quote:
cfb said:In my opinion, and this was what I wanted to discuss, civil religion should be abolished from American society politics



I understand your jist and I believe you have the noblest intentions in your current way of thinking but if you take that sentence alone, which seems to sumarise your desire for the discussion in an absorbable chunk, and think about the means with which you would achieve such a thing...

I can't tell if you're coming from a hippy or Vulcan point of view here, or best case: both? Love or logic. Unfortunately reality, especially group dynamics, social and political structures tend to made of, and formed by, the things less lovely.

However noble your intent with that post I'm not sure it's not vain wind chasing!

docilebob
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist

From: buttcrack of the midwest
Insane since: Oct 2000

posted posted 11-02-2006 07:22

And who gets to decide where the wall is between "civil religion", politics, history , and patriotism ?
That woud leave them deciding what is religion and what is not.

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-02-2006 07:42

Don't "they" already do that?

From Everson v. Board of Education:

quote:
The establishment of religion clause means at least this: Neither a state nor the federal government may set up a church. Neither can pass laws that aid one religion, aid all religions, or prefer one religion over another. Neither can force a person to go to or to remain away from church against his will or force him to profess a belief or disbelief in any religion... . Neither a state or the federal government may, openly or secretly, participate in the affairs of any religious organizations or groups and vice versa. In the words of Jefferson, the clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect 'a wall of separation between church and state.'



Also from the amended Lemon test (Agostini v. Felton), the establishment clause is violated when:

1. The government supports "indoctrination"
2. Selecting benefit recipients on the basis of religion
3. Government entanglement with religion.

--

What I am saying is this: that the transcendent civil religion should be recognized alongside denominational religions. For example government-supported Memorial Day celebrations should not invoke God to validate American wars, references to American exceptionalism should not mention derivatives of the "city on a hill" idea. We should identify the tenants of a civil religion because these tenants have been used historically to further totalitarian regimes, genocides, isolationism, imperialism, and political-worship.

I guess this is Spock talking though a haze of pot smoke. I am not saying we should abolish civil religion from society, because it has obvious uses, but that politics should be filtered through some type of "logical" system. Probably idealistic, and I'm probably masturbating with my mouth (or hand on keyboard here!).

However if the civil religion was recognized alongside denominational religions, litigation-happy groups (ACLU, etc) could threaten lawsuits against government officials or offices who use the civil religion for personal (political) benefit. However this would clog the legal system, be horribly ineffective, and be terribly unpopular with the American public. So...

So yes to JK

(Edited by cfb on 11-02-2006 07:45)

(Edited by cfb on 11-02-2006 07:49)

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-02-2006 07:56

Also I'm not sure this would even be a good thing. It would probably have horrible consequences. I just think it's an interesting discussion and generally a controversial thesis gets things going.

DL-44
Lunatic (VI) Inmate

From: under the bed
Insane since: Feb 2000

posted posted 11-02-2006 17:26

I can't help but think as I read your post, cfb, that that vast majority of what you typed was takedn directly from a book, article, or website that you just read.
If 'm way off the mark with that, by all means let me know - but that's how it reads.

That said, I have a difficult time in agreeing with much of what you posted, and an even more difficult time in determining what it is you actually mean through the akward language. The wording seems aimed at making an impression in a highschool english classs as oppsoed to making an actual discussible point.

I would enjoy sharing my thoughts on the issues you bring up, but I would be much better able to do that if you could clarify your actual points.

FWIW...

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-02-2006 19:07

Not really. I'm doing a paper on civil religion and education, so yes, a few books and articles. However, it's not typed directly from any one (or many) sources. I got some ideas from:

American Civil Religion: An Assessment - Gehrig
a. general definition of transcendent-civil religion
b. role in American education
c. and nationalism
Civil Religion and the Choice for President: Nixon in '72 - Wimberley
a. and education, nationalism
b. distinction from denominational religion
Globalization and the Religious Nationalism: Self, Identity, and the Search for Ontological Security (Kinnvall)
a. group homogeneity and heterogeneity and the effects of nationalism on the former
Citizenship and Civic Engagement (Theiss-Morse and Hibbing)
a. effects of group homogeneity on civic engagement
b. tendency of persons to choose one group over the other in relationship to religious, nationalistic, preference
...Spatial Variation in Tolerance: The Effects of Education and Religion (Moore and Ovadia)
a. Connecting education, nationalism, denomination to tolerance level

Most of this was just conclusions taken from the articles (except "Globalization") and I don't think my civics textbook even mentions civil religion. It's just a subject that interests me. Many people really have no idea what a civil religion is, so I thought I'd type a very brief introduction.

--

I don't really think it was too hard to understand my point. Then again, sometimes you sound like Richard Dawkin's parrot (kidding)

quote:
What I am saying is this: that the transcendent civil religion should be recognized alongside denominational religions...



and as such, should be treated accordingly.

It's typed plain as day.

(Edited by cfb on 11-02-2006 19:09)

(Edited by cfb on 11-02-2006 19:11)

DL-44
Lunatic (VI) Inmate

From: under the bed
Insane since: Feb 2000

posted posted 11-02-2006 20:52
quote:

cfb said:

I don't really think it was too hard to understand my point.


Well, in that you'd be wrong


quote:

cfb said:

It's typed plain as day.


Yes, there are the words.
Along with a whole lot of other jumbled words without much in the way of direct meaning

Dawkins' huh?
I guess worse things could be said. Haven't read or heard much from the guy however - can't plead guilty to that charge.

Anyway, if that is the extent of your point, I'll be back when when I'm not at work and have time to dig in.

docilebob
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist

From: buttcrack of the midwest
Insane since: Oct 2000

posted posted 11-02-2006 22:49

If it is recognised as a religion, does everyone spouting patriotic themes, or justifying history get tax exempt status ?
I think you`re just stirring up a can of radioactive worms here.

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-03-2006 02:33

Well, for example. I get tired of having to filter through the pomp of politics to find core issues. When my voters pamphlet makes the claim: "I-933 would limit big government" and makes the further claim that "big government" would infringe upon "American rights" in the pro-con section following the fiscal impact statements (I think the pamphlets have a pretty standard format, but if not, you get the point), it's frustrating to see a more objective matter (giving landowners the right to sue for government-initiated losses to potential real estate value) argued in the context of an "American way."

In President Bush's inaugural address: ([urlhttp://www.whitehouse.gov/news/inaugural-address.htmlp/url])

quote:
We have a place, all of us, in a long story--a story we continue, but whose end we will not see. It is the story of a new world that became a friend and liberator of the old ... It is the American story--a story of flawed and fallible people, united across the generations by grand and enduring ideals.



You can see a reference to transcendent civil religion here ("grand and enduring ideals") without any specific mention of these ideals. I think it's clear that these "ideals" are reminiscent of the nature-God which Enlightenment philosophers used to validate natural rights.

--

So would be better off if some type of regulation existed to temper this idea? Or would it in fact dissolve the glue of American society? Many nations with strong government-civilian relationships have a civil religion without religious overtones. This would be another variant of this idea but wouldn't be classified as a "civil religion."

I think its potential for abuse it what makes some type of regulation necessary. Because there is not specific boundary and we are not taught to recognize the concept in society and politics the persuasive power of civil religion is enormous. The argument President Bush made is well-crafted but is it true? He goes on to connect the "ideals" to philosophical traditions (natural rights, freedom, democracy) using the word "faith" (as in "a faith in 'x'"). These ideas aren't' necessarily American however.

So maybe another question is this. Is the benefit of a civil religion that it holds society together?

For example the idea of natural rights was derived from spiritual means. There is little basis for the idea that humans are equal without resorting to a higher power. It doesn't matter if we are "endowed" or "commanded" to respect this because it goes against everything nature should have "endowed" in us.

I have yet to see a convincing argument for "equality" or natural rights from an anti-spiritual perspective. If there is one, then feel free to correct me. So another point is: I just may have over-reacted. I revise my statement to say "Should American civil religion be abolished or taught? And if taught should it be positively or negatively, or merely to identify?" It seems far too influential a factor to merely ignore.

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-03-2006 02:34

and yeah I have a tendency to write around what I want to say. Sorry about that.

:X

UnknownComic
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: 2 steps away from a los angeles curb
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 11-03-2006 15:51

Errr, might as well be a dissertation on the abolishing of tentacle porn...

What you propose is way too subjective to be codified in any intelligible manner. there is literally no way to separate from the human experience the shared sense of community that "You" propose is "civil religion".

I like the comment that speaks of radioactive worm stirring. This is just an argument for arguing. The words leading up to your plain as day postulation are superfluous and disjointed. It causes a mind blur kind of thing and leaves only a vague sense of something being said but nothing really substantive enough to actually pick a side for or against. Halfway through reading it, the brain disengages and says "HUH?".

I would say try again with something more inflammatory so that the gut could get involved and then people could sputter something incoherent, yet emotional, back at you.

[edit] Stupid fucking spell check... when I hit enter it posted the thing with typos... sheesh, screw this! I'm gonna go surf for free grainy porn pictures. Laterz... [/edit]

______________
Is This Thing On?

Webbing; the stuff that sticks to your face.

(Edited by UnknownComic on 11-03-2006 16:01)

DL-44
Lunatic (VI) Inmate

From: under the bed
Insane since: Feb 2000

posted posted 11-03-2006 22:37

Ok. let's se if I can make sense here

The term 'civil religion' is a very forced, contrived and akward way to describe the situation.
Clearly any group comprised of any level of organization will have things in common with other such groups. It is the nature of organization.

A nation will therefore have similarities with a religion, in terms of methods used to promote cohesion - heirarchy, rules, propaganda, and all other kinds of homegeniety will be employed by all members of the group in one way or another.

To say that these similiarites make one group the other is silly. It is an attempt to force as many things as possible into as small a hole as possible under the same label, in order to avoid having to think seriously about the vast differences between them.

Calling ideas of national unity a 'civil religion' is akin to calling kitchen faucets 'streams and rivers' and regulating them the same way. Are there similarities? Of course. Can an abstract argument be made that would equate them? Of course.

Are they the same thing, and should they be treated the same way? Of course not.

Some specifics:

quote:

For example government-supported Memorial Day celebrations should not invoke God to validate American wars,


Whether or not a memorial day celebration is government supported, it is a celebration by the people of what it considers its heroes. To say that becuase the celebration is 'government supported' the people cannot express their feelings in terms of their religion is a ridiculous notion. Freedom of religion means that I am free not to have religion imposed upon me, and am free to practice my religion - and of course to speak about it as well.

quote:
references to American exceptionalism should not mention derivatives of the "city on a hill" idea.


1) how could this be even remotely possible to enforce, on any level?
2) who is to decide the validity (or lack thereof) of any 'city on a hill' comparisons? Are we to stop making comparisons at all, in fear that they might fall under this contrived umbrella of 'civil religion'?
3) why not?

quote:
We should identify the tenants of a civil religion because these tenants have been used historically to further totalitarian regimes, genocides, isolationism, imperialism, and political-worship.



"Forks have been used to stab people's eyes.
We must identify and remove reference to forks from interpersonal conversation."

A stretch, yes. But do you see how the logic is the same?

The tenets? Any such tenet would be so loosely defined, and so varied between people that they would be very hard to define at all. Once definitions were reached, they would be so vague as to essentially cover any sort of patriotic view or expression, or any sense of national cohesion. I don't see this to be in any way helpful, desirable, plausible, or logical.

Essentially, the only outcome I can see of pursuing this kind of censorship is a complete reversal of what is feared might happen in the first place: totalitarian enforcement of anti-nationalistic views. I can see this kind of approach leading *only* to totalitarianism.

To disallow the sentiments you talk about is to remove the function of choice from the people, and to forcibly eliminate/subdue intelligence.

DL-44
Lunatic (VI) Inmate

From: under the bed
Insane since: Feb 2000

posted posted 11-07-2006 17:35

well....ok then.

cfb
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Vancouver, WA
Insane since: Nov 2003

posted posted 12-17-2006 23:18

Sorry, been busy with finals!

quote:
To say that these similiarites make one group the other is silly. It is an attempt to force as many things as possible into as small a hole as possible under the same label, in order to avoid having to think seriously about the vast differences between them.



It's probably a good thing I posted what I did here, because my final paper for pol. sci covered the topic. I gave that statement some though, and came to a few conclusions. First, after reading more on the topic, that it's important to force the label while acknowledging the differences, even categorizing the label with adjectives (Protestant, secular, state, etc). Second, that demonizing the label and everything it touches is irresponsible and a knee-jerk reaction.

Firstly, that it does exist. From "The Civil Religion Dimension, Is It There?" (1976), and a few other papers, was prompted my response. Since the authors identified attributes such as "presidential authority, flag is sacred, gov't supported morality" as increasing with the civil religiosity of the subjects, but actual (institutional) religion decreased with it. So my misreading partly prompted concern.

However I do think some concern should exist. Although America seems to mediate it well. It seems circuitous, though. That we need such a system to prompt faith in democracy and that democracy rides upon it (a general conclusion i found).

What I'm getting at, then, is how we perceive our democracy in America: do we need the "civil religion" to sustain it, and why exactly shouldn't democracy flourish according to its own merits, not those we say it has?

Maybe we are inextricably bound to religion?


--

For the record, I'm bad at political science, because I keep trying to approach it like I would lit/english, a subject I love and cherish. Which isn't acceptable, because it's a science, unfortunately, and you can't make up new definitions and axioms and systems to work under.

(Edited by cfb on 12-17-2006 23:36)

DL-44
Lunatic (VI) Inmate

From: under the bed
Insane since: Feb 2000

posted posted 12-18-2006 04:27
quote:

cfb said:

What I'm getting at, then, is how we perceive our democracy in America: do we need the "civil religion" to sustain it, and why exactly shouldn't democracy flourish according to its own merits, not those we say it has?



I must reiterate that the concept of 'civil religion' is at best a metaphor. And an unnecessary one at that. We can see that similarity. We can see the difference. Of value is it to force this metaphor and make such a show of it?

The line that you quoted from me above is really all I can say on the subject - it would be my reply to what you just posted had I not already said it

The concern over the way we present our history and national identity may well be valid ones, but they are more valid outside of this contrived label, where they can be discussed on *their* own merits rather than on the merits of the metaphor...

FWIW



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