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Today's
Stories
September 9/10, 2006
Weekend Edition
Greg Grandin
Good Christ, Bad Christ: Testament
of the Death Squads
Ralph Nader
X-Raying Greed
September
8, 2006
Uri
Avnery
"I'm a Leftist, But ...":
the Liberals' War on Lebanon
Paul
Craig Roberts
Books Are Our Salvation
Bill
Quigley
Judge Says: "No Clowning Around Our WMDs!"
Robert
Jensen
Parallel Purges: Academic Freedom
in Iran and the US
Norman
Solomon
Perception Gap: The War on Terror as Others See It
Keith
Bolin
The Future of the Family Farm
Kristin
S. Schafer
The Global Trade in Deadly Pesticides
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Five)
Patrick
Cockburn
Gaza is Dying
Website
of the Day
Help the Bismark 3!
September 7, 206
Marjorie
Cohn
Why Bush Really Came Clean About the
CIA's Secret Torture Prisons
Sharon
Smith
Downward Mobility: No Recovery for Workers
René
Drucker Colín
The Fraud in Mexico
Michael
Donnelly
Bush Family Values: About Those Nazi Appeasers
John
Borowski
Scholastic Peddles a Fictitious Path to 9/11 to Kids
Lucinda
Marshall
Bombing Indiana
Charles
Sullivan
Katrina and the New Jim Crow: Ethnic Cleansing in New Orleans
Jeffrey
St. Clair
The Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part Four
Jonathan
Cook
How Human Rights Watch Lost Its Way
in Lebanon
Website
of the Day
Rasta!
Reggae's Joe Hill
September
6, 2006
Stephen
Soldz
Protecting the Torturers: Bad Faith
and Distortions frm the American Psychological Assocation
Dave
Zirin
Cops vs. Jocks: the Shooting of Steve
Foley
Ramzy
Baroud
The Gaza Maze: Who Gained Most from the Fox Reporters' Kidnapping
Noel
Ignatiev
Democrats, Pwogs and the Lesser Evil Folly
Dave
Lindorff
Bombing Without Regrets: The US and Cluster Bombs
Norman
Solomon
Spinning Troop Levels in Iraq
Binoy
Kampmark
The Death of Steve Irwin and the Politics of the Zoo
Jeffrey
St. Clair
A Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon (Part Three)
John
Ross
The Death of Mexican Presidency
Website
of the Day
Flaming Arrows
September
5, 2006
Jonathan Cook
Will Robert Fisk tell us the whole story? Time For A Champion
of Truth to Speak Up
Patrick Cockburn
Better Not Meet at the Casbah
Mike Whitney
The Worst Secretary of Defense in U.S. History? You Be the Judge
Roland Sheppard
The Civil Rights Movement is Dead and So is the Democratic Party
James Petras
As Bush Regime Faces Twilight Slide, How Much Havoc Can Paulson
Wreak?
Alexander Cockburn
Will Bush Bomb Teheran?
September 4,
2006
Clancy Sigal
The Women Who Gave Us Labor Day
Jeffrey St.
Clair
The
Remaking of Cataract Canyon: Part 2
Anthony Alessandrini
The
Great Debate about Aroma Coffee: Why I Boycott
Dennis Perrin
The
Great Debate in Tarrytown: Straight Zion, No Chaser
Daniel Cassidy
'S
lom to Slum
Paul Craig
Roberts
The
War Is Lost
September 2
/ 3, 2006
Uri Avnery
When
Napoleon Won at Waterloo
Jeffrey St.
Clair
A
Premature Burial: the Remaking of Cataract Canyon
Ralph Nader
The
No-Fault White House
Noam Chomsky
Viewing the World from a Bombsight
Allan Lichtman
Arrested Democracy: Letter from the Baltimore County Jail
Stanley Heller
When Criticism of Cluster Bombs is "Anti-Semitic"
Rana el-Khatib
Invasion's Child: the Making of Issa
Peter Montague
Taking on the Pentagon: Chemical Weapons to Burn
Laura Carlsen
Mexico on a Collision Course
Dr. Susan Block
Bush Hate Rising
Joe Bageant
Roy's People: Why Progressives Need to Listen to Orbison, Not
Policy Wonks
Scott Stedjan / Matt Schaaf
A New Generation of Landmines?
Gary Leupp
The Emperor Has Been Exposed
Stephen Fleischman
The Great American Oligarchy
Paul Balles
Has Ahmadinejad Already Checkmated Bush?
Ingmar Lee
Canada's $450 Million Gift to Bush: the Softwood Lumber Slush
Fund
Jane Stillwater
Burning Man: the Good, the Bad and the Evil Twin
Ron Jacobs
Dylan Faces the Apocalypse, Again
St. Clair /
Bossert
Playlist: What We're Listening to This Week
Poets' Basement
Grima, Engel, Orloski and Davies
Website of
the Weekend
To New Orleans: a Photo Journal
September 1,
2006
Uri Avnery
Olmert
Agonistes
Paul Craig
Roberts
Of
Wolves and Men (and Impotent Democrats)
Bill Ayers
Exclusionary Signs of the Times
Kevin Zeese
The Best War Ever
Xochitl Bervera
The Forgotten Children of New Orleans
Norman Solomon
Bush vs. Ahmadinejad: a TV Debate We'll Never See
Alexander Cockburn
Hezbollah Denounces Nasrallah Interview as a Fake
Richard Neville
Rupert
Murdoch's Victims
Website of the Day
The Uranium Flood
| Weekend
Edition
September 9/10 , 2006
Testament of the Death Squads
Good Christ, Bad
Christ
By GREG
GRANDIN
Just
a few years ago, with the release of The Passion of the Christ,
Mel Gibson seemed to have done what centuries of religious wars
and inquisitions couldn’t: unite Christians, at least conservative
Christians. More than two hours of remorseless sadism, of thorns,
whips and nails, washed away not just sin but theological quarrels
that have defined Christianity since Luther nailed his 95 theses
to the gate at Wittenberg Church.
Never
mind that Gibson is Catholic. Evangelical Tim LaHaye, the author
of the popular Left Behind novels, pronounced the film a “scripturally
accurate account of how He really suffered for the sins of the whole
world,” even though LaHaye believes Catholics to be little
better than pagans who indeed would most likely be “left behind”
when the Rapture came. Gibson in fact pulled off something like
a modern miracle: he transubstantiated the body and blood of a humane
and forgiving Jesus worshiped by less vengeful Christians -- by
Catholic Workers, Social Gospel protestants, and even the manor-born
Episcopalians who until recently commanded the Republican Party
and helped administer the secular welfare state -- into Christ in
Pain, a castigated and castigating icon that served as a common
reference point for an amalgamated Religious Right. Even politically
conservative Jews like David Horowitz and Michael Medved could join
in the communion. Horowitz pronounced the film “awesome,”
as “close to a religious experience as art can get”
and a parable for the cruelties of the twentieth century.
But
Gibson’s drunken summer sermon to Malibu police, when in apparent
reference to Israel’s attack on Lebanon he accused Jews of
starting all the world’s wars, opened an important schism
between his brand of medieval Catholicism and the beliefs of many
of his fervently pro-Israel evangelical supporters. Gibson is a
member of a Catholic sect so conservative that it makes Opus Dei
look like a Quaker prayer meeting, one that wants not just to stop
history’s clock but turn it back a millennia. His anti-Semitism
is straight out of the pages of the Merchant of Venice. Christian
Zionists, in contrast, are futurists. As the Third International
Christian Zionist Congress put it in 1996, the Jews are the “elect
of God, and without the Jewish nation His redemptive purposes for
the world will not be completed.” What that purpose entails
depends on who you talk to. Hard-core dispensationalists believe
that Israel needs to be defended only to be sacrificed at the Final
Conflict, when upward of two thirds of Jews will be slaughtered
and the rest either converted or eternally damned. The Texas mega-church
reverend John Hagee -- the founder of the new Christians United
for Israel who blessed Tel Aviv’s bombing of Lebanon as a
“miracle of God” -- preaches a gentler version. He concedes,
publicly at least, that Jews could be saved without conversion,
even as Israel serves as the final “battlefield,” drowned
in a “sea of human blood drained from the veins of those who
have followed Satan.”
Last
month, Hagee and other prominent Christian Zionists were in the
news, passionately defending Israel’s right to attack Lebanon.
They condemned to impose a ceasefire and exhorting their allies
in the Bush administration to escalate the war into Iran. Yet conservative
evangelicals have their eyes set on more than Jerusalem; they are
key players in the White House’s foreign policy coalition,
embracing not just the purpose-driven rhetoric so favored by the
Bush administration but also its political and economic agenda.
If Not For America
This past June, Condoleezza Rice attended the Southern Baptist Convention
in Greensboro, North Carolina, and delivered the kind of speech
US secretaries of states usually reserve for Washington insiders.
Addressing 12,000 evangelicals -- a group the Washington Post
described as representing the “core of the Bush administration’s
political base" -- Rice urged the crowd, despite rising
anti-Americanism and despite the bad news coming out of Iraq, not
to give in to the temptations of isolationism. “If not for
America,” Rice asked the congregation, “who would rally
freedom-loving nations to defend liberty and democracy in our world?”
That she received no less than seven standing ovations confirms
that fundamentalists have come a long way from when Billy James
Hargis, leader of the Christian Crusade, declared in 1962 that “the
primary threat to the United States is internationalism.”
In
fact, conservative evangelicals are America’s true internationalists.
Congressional Christians like Virginian Representative Frank Wolf
and Kansas Senator Sam Brownback consistently push the US government
to deal with global humanitarian issues such as AIDS, sex trafficking,
slavery, religious freedom, malaria, and genocide prevention. Bush
has seeded USAID with a number of fundamentalists, including Paul
Bonicelli, the former academic dean of Virginia’s Patrick
Henry College, which is geared toward home-schooled Christians who
plan to enter public service. Bonicelli is in charge of the Bureau
for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance, which dispenses
public money to “faith-based” humanitarian organizations,
many of them focused on Africa, a central site of conservative missionary
work. Lest this involvement in administering the “soft”
side of American power corrupt their minds, students at Patrick
Henry, which include hundreds who have gone on to work in the Bush
administration, including at least one who served in Iraq’s
Coalition Provisional Authority, are required to sign a statement
of faith that “Satan exists as a personal, malevolent being
who acts as tempter and accuser, for whom Hell, the place of eternal
punishment, was prepared, where all who die outside of Christ shall
be confined in conscious torment for eternity."
Religious
Right militants are also increasing their influence over America’s
fire and brimstone. Last year, a moderate chaplain resigned from
the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs after a Pentagon investigation
whitewashed the growing hold Pentecostal preachers have over the
institution, where cadets are pressured to accept Jesus or “burn
in the fires of hell.” And remember Lieutenant General William
Boykin? He was the “prayer warrior” who helped “gitmoize”
Abu Ghraib. After revealing that he had inside information that
the U.S. would win the War on Terror because the Christian God is
bigger than” than Islam’s god and warning that “Satan”
plans to “destroy” America “as a Christian army,”
Boykin was not removed from office but promoted to the number two
slot in charge of intelligence in the Pentagon.
It
is not just wrong but dangerously delusional, therefore, to think
of America’s Religious Right as fringe anti-modernists, who,
if parochial “value” issues such as abortion or gay
rights were spun into innocuous language, could be conned into voting
for a centrist Democrat with multilateral sympathies who would defend
what is left of the New Deal. Its leadership forms a central constituency
in a foreign policy establishment that has wedded militarism to
a uniquely American form of idealism. In fact, with Iraq proving
the neocons to be inept strategists, evangelical internationalists
like Hagee, who is happy to believe that the “end of the world
as we know it is rapidly approaching,” have emerged as the
vital force behind Bush’s unrepentant righteous realism. During
the recent Israel-Hezbollah war, Bill Kristol, along with potential
GOP presidential contenders John McCain and Newt Gingrich, were
showing up on news shows hymning from Hagee’s recent best-seller
Jerusalem Coming to justify taking the fight to Iran.
A Central American Da Vinci Code
Well before neocons teamed up with the Religious Right to fight
radical Islam in what the former believes is WW IV and the latter
prays is Armageddon, they honed their fighting skills against another
“political religion:” Liberation Theology, Latin America’s
Christian socialism which fought against US-backed military juntas
and sought to achieve social justice through a redistribution of
wealth. Two decades before Gibson’s bloodied and tortured
body of Christ became a symbol of a united New Right, the diverse
strains of America’s conservative movement came together over
the bloodied and tortured bodies of Central Americans.
Starting
in the 1960s, conservative evangelical theologians such as John
Price and Jerry Falwell interpreted, as did their secular declinists
counterparts, defeat in Vietnam as a signal moment of world history
in which the US stood at the precipice of collapse. They not only
urged their flocks to fight what would become known as the culture
wars, the campaign against the Equal Rights Amendment, abortion,
gay rights, and so forth, but to get more involved in foreign affairs
as well. Ronald Reagan’s crusade against the Central American
Left--his patronage of the Contra insurgents in Nicaragua and death-squad
states in El Salvador and Guatemala--was the first extensive opportunity
to do so, an apprenticeship that gave the Religious Right its first
real taste of its own power within the Republican Party and drew
it closer to other groups within the Reagan Revolution.
In
order to bypass public and Congressional opposition, the White House
outsourced the “hearts and minds” component of its Central
American wars to evangelicals. Phyllis Schlafly’s Eagle Forum
sent down “Freedom Fighter Friendship Kits” to the Contras,
complete with toothpaste, insect repellent, and a bible. Gospel
Crusades, Inc, Friends of the Americas, Operation Blessing, World
Vision, the Wycliffe Bible Translators, and World Medical Relief
likewise shipped hundreds of tons of humanitarian aid to the anti-Sandinista
rebels and Honduran refugee camps, where they established schools,
health clinics, and religious missions. In El Salvador, Harvesting
in Spanish, Paralife Ministries, the National Association of Evangelicals,
the Nicaraguan Freedom Fund (affiliated with the Unification Church)
and the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade broadcast radio programs,
handed out bibles, ran schools, established medical and dental clinics,
and provided moral education to the soldiers. Pat Robertson used
his Christian Broadcasting Network to raise money for Efraín
Ríos Montt, the evangelical Christian who presided over the
Guatemala’s 1982 genocide, which killed over a hundred thousand
Mayan Indians. Most of the Guatemalan relief aid raised by evangelicals
in the United States, by groups such as the California-based charismatic
Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship, went to help the military’s
efforts to establish control in the countryside in the wake of its
campaign of massacres.
In
the United States, right-wing Christians Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell,
Tim and Beverly LaHaye, Phyllis Schlafly and Oliver North, along
with evangelical capitalists such as Amway founder Richard DeVos,
founded the Council for National Policy in 1981, which, as the Religious
Right’s steering committee in the 1980s, was deeply involved
in Reagan’s Central American exploits. Christian businessmen
raised money for arms and humanitarian work and funded the myriad
organizations that worked closely with the White House to sway public
opinion and congressional votes in favor of Reagan’s policy
in El Salvador and Nicaragua. As part of Iran-Contra’s extensive
support network, they deepened their ties with the international
Right, with retired military and black ops personal, mercenaries,
arms merchants, right-wing public relations experts, ex-agents of
the Iranian Shah’s secret policy, international drug traffickers,
the Sultan of Brunei, and anticommunist states such as Saudi Arabia,
Taiwan, Panama, and Israel. Many of the militarists who executed
the Contra war -- John Singlaub, CIA director William Casey,
Vernon Walters, and Oliver North -- were themselves members
of either Protestant or Catholic ultramontane sects, such as the
charismatic Church of the Apostles, Opus Dei and the Knights of
Malta. Catholic Casey attended mass daily, and filled his mansion
with statues of the Virgin Mary. The Da Vinci Code has nothing on
what took place in Central America during the 1980s.
The Economics of Satan
Reagan’s
Christian soldiers, however, carried aloft not the banner of the
lord of love popularized by Dan Brown but a pitiless avenger. It
was largely in opposition to the Christian humanism that motivated
Central American revolutionaries and reformers, as well as its supporters
in the US, that the New Right elaborated the ethical justification
of today’s free-market militarism. Not only was the Central
American Left motivated as much by Catholic Liberation Theology
as by Marxism, the domestic solidarity movement, much more than
the protests against the Vietnam War, was noticeably Christian.
Groups such as the Religious Task Force on El Salvador, Ecumenical
Program on Central America and the Caribbean, the U.S. Catholic
Conference, Witness for Peace, the Quakers, and the National Council
of Churches actively mobilized hundreds of thousands of Christians
in opposition to Reagan’s policy. It was a shared hostility
to this Christian socialism that united mainstream conservative
Protestants and pulpit thumping fundamentalists.
Take
the Institute on Religion and Democracy for example.
Today,
the neoconservative IRD is a key player in the Bush coalition, working
hard to discredit liberal religious organizations that oppose Bush’s
wars. Two of its theologians -- Michael Novak and Richard Neuhaus
-- have provided the White House with key spiritual guidance, theologically
defending not just American militarism but the free-market fundamentalism
and orgy of wealth accumulation that underwrites that militarism.
The IRD, it turns out, was founded in 1981 by intellectuals associated
with the American Enterprise Institute and advised by PR firms contracted
by the White House. Its mission was to provide “mainstream”
religious support for Reagan’s Central American policy, yet
it immediately allied with evangelicals like Jimmy Swaggert, Jerry
Falwell, and Pat Robertson to take on Liberation Theology.
In
a series of books and articles challenging the major tenets and
proponents of liberation theology, Novak and Neuhaus began to, as
Novak put it, “locate a theological grounding for corporate
capitalism” by elaborating a set of ideals specific to the
free market that they believed complimented the Christian understanding
of free will. To those who said that capitalism embodied the worst
of acquisitive individualism, Novak, who presented himself as a
political liberal, responded with his “theology of the corporation,”
which held up the business firm as “an expression of the social
nature of humans.” He dedicated much of his work to refuting
liberation theology’s insistence that Third World poverty
could be blamed on exploitation by the First World, arguing that
Latin America’s economic backwardness must be blamed on “cultural”
factors.
As did their mainstream coreligionists, fundamentalists formulated
their free-market moralism as a quarrel with liberation theology.
The founder of Christian Reconstructionism, the influential branch
of the evangelical movement that seeks to replace the Constitution
with biblical law, Rousas John Rushdoony described liberation theology
as the “economics of Satan,” while another preacher
labeled a “theology of mass murder” and the “the
single most critical problem that Christianity has faced in all
of its 2000 year history.” Capitalism, they insisted, was
an ethical system, one that corresponds to God’s gift of free
will. Man lives in a “fundamentally scarce world,” Christian
economist John Cooper argued, not an abundant one only in need of
more equitable distribution, as the liberation theologians would
have it. The profit motive, rather than being an amoral economic
mechanism, is part of a divine plan to discipline fallen man and
make him produce. Where Christian humanists contended that people
were fundamentally good and that “evil” was a condition
of class exploitation, Christian capitalists such as Amway’s
Richard DeVos, head of the Christian Freedom Foundation, insisted
that evil is found in the heart of man.
Where
liberation theology held that humans could fully realize their potential
here on earth, fundamentalist economists argued that attempts to
distribute wealth and regulate production was based on an incorrect
understanding of society -- an understanding that incited disobedience
to proper authority and, by highlighting economic inequality, generated
guilt, envy, and conflict. God’s Kingdom, they insisted, would
not be established by a war between the classes but a struggle between
the good and the evil.
As
did Novak, evangelicals sought to rebut liberation theology’s
critique of the global political economy. Third World poverty, according
to evangelical Ronald Nash, has a “cultural, moral, and even
religious dimension” that reveals itself in a “lack
of respect for any private property,” “lack of initiative,”
and “high leisure preference.” Some took this argument
to its logical conclusion. Gary North, another influential evangelical
economist, insisted that the “Third World’s problems
are religious: moral perversity, a long history of demonism, and
outright paganism.” “The citizens of the Third World,”
he wrote, “ought to feel guilt, to fall on their knees and
repent from their Godless, rebellious, socialistic ways. They should
feel guilty because they are guilty, both individually and corporately.”
Evangelical
Christianity’s elaboration of a theological justification
for free-market capitalism, along with its view of a immoral third
world, resonated with other ideological currents within the New
Right, laying the groundwork for today’s embrace of empire
as America’s national purpose. In a universe of free will
where good work is rewarded and bad works punished, the fact of
American prosperity was a self-evident confirmation of god’s
blessing of US power in the world. Third-world misery, in contrast,
was proof of “God’s curse.” David Chilton, of
the Institute for Christian Economics, a Reconstructionist think
tank, wrote that poverty is how “God controls heathen cultures:
they must spend so much time surviving that they are unable to exercise
ungodly dominion over the earth.”
Novak
and Neuhaus would not use such stark terms, yet the sentiment is
step removed from their logic. After all, the IRD’s mission
statement, written by Neuhaus, anointed America to be the “primary
bearer of the democratic possibility in the world today.”
Such an opinion nestles comfortably with evangel notions that America
is a “redeemer nation” and saturates the president’s
foreign policy pronouncements. “America stands as a beacon
of light to the world,” Bush said in his Ellis Island address
on the first anniversary of 9/11, cribbing from scripture to replace
Jesus with America, “and the light shines in the darkness,
and the darkness has not overcome it.”
The Bringers of Wrath
Not all in the Religious Right who backed Reagan’s Central
American wars have followed Bush across the Rubicon. Some, such
as Phyllis Schlafly, have remained true to their isolationist faith.
Others like evangelical economist Gary North reject the end-time
eschatology of the Christian Zionists. But the kind of moralism
that many key fundamentalists used to justify the violence visited
on Central America in the 1980s easily led to the kind of righteousness
that today legitimates cluster bombing of civilians as an option
of first resort.
Throughout the 1980s, as its involvement in Nicaragua, El Salvador,
and Guatemala deepened, fundamentalists came to share with Reaganite
neocons and militarists a common set of assumptions about the world
and America’s role in it. The U.S. had grown dangerously weak,
and where neocons called for renewal of political will, evangelicals
believed that America’s revival would come about through spiritual
rebirth. Their sense of themselves as a persecuted people, engaged
in a life and death end-time struggle between the forces of good
and evil mapped easily onto the millennialism of anti-communist
militarists, particularly those involved in Central America.
Working
closely with neoconservative policy intellectuals such as Elliot
Abrams, Otto Reich, Robert Kagan, and Jeane Kirkpatrick, conservative
evangelical theologians established a moral justification for Reagan’s
rehabilitation of militarism. They aligned their theology to incorporate
elements of both the idealism and the unflinching militarism that
led straight to war in Iraq. “Our government,” wrote
Falwell in 1980 but sounding a lot like George W. Bush in 2002,
“has the right to use its armaments to bring wrath upon those
who would do evil by hurting other people.” And not just defensively
but preemptively: “we must go on the offensive,” wrote
Rus Walton in his 1988 Biblical Solutions to Contemporary Problems:
A Handbook.
The
violence of counterinsurgent war stoked the fires of fundamentalist
Manichaeism, leading Falwell, Robertson, and others to ally with
the worst murderers and torturers in Central and Latin America.
“For the Christian,” believes Walton, “there can
be no neutrality in this battle: 'He that is not with Me is against
Me’ (Matthew 12:30).” Robertson described the genocide
carried out by Guatemala’s Efraín Ríos Montt
as a “miracle” and celebrated Salvador’s Roberto
D'Aubuisson, the killer of, along with untold others, Archbishop
Oscar Romero, on his Christian Broadcasting Network. In 1984, more
than a dozen Christian New Right organizations, including the Moral
Majority, presented D'Aubuisson with a plaque honoring his “continuing
efforts for freedom.”
Many
of the death-squad members were themselves conservative religious
ideologues, taking the fight against liberation theology to the
trenches. Guatemalan security forces regularly questioned their
prisoners about their “views on liberation theology.”
Others report being tortured to the singing of hymns and praying.
Some evangelicals excused such suffering. ”Killing for the
joy of it was wrong,” a Paralife minister from the United
States comforted his flock of Salvadoran soldiers, “but killing
because it was necessary to fight against an anti-Christ system,
communism, was not only right but a duty of every Christian.”
So
when Jeane Kirkpatrick remarked that the three US nuns and one lay
worker who were raped, mutilated and murdered by Salvadoran security
forces in 1980 were “not just nuns, they were political activists,"
she was being more than cruel. She was signaling her disapproval
of a particular kind of peace Christianity. Over the next ten years,
as a direct result of US policy, more than three hundred thousand
Central Americans, many of them devout Christians, would be killed
and tortured, and over a million driven into exile. In a way, the
New Right’s crusade in Central America was a preview of the
tormented Jesus that premiered two decades later in The Passion
of the Christ -- and, despite Gibson’s drunken dissent, is
today on world tour in Boykin’s Abu Ghraib and the killing
fields of Iraq and now Lebanon.
Greg Grandin, a recent recipient of a John Simon
Guggenheim Fellowship, teaches Latin American history at New York
University and is the author of a number of books, including most
recently Empire's
Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the
New Imperialism (Metropolitan). He can be reached at:
gjg4@nyu.edu |
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