Date: 25 August 1993 Subject: Hocus Focus From: citizens@cscns.com (David Bruce, PhD; Member, Citizens Project) X-Copyright: Copyright (c) 1993 by David Bruce. This material may be freely copied and distributed for noncommercial purposes provided that this notice remains intact. Commercial use of this material requires prior written permission from the author. X-Disclaimer: THIS MATERIAL DOES NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT THE VIEWS OF CITIZENS PROJECT. IT IS PROVIDED SOLELY AS A SERVICE TO OUR PARTICIPANTS. Recently I attended a Focus on the Family Community Impact Seminar. I must admit from the onset I consider myself somewhat of a spiritual refugee from a fundamentalist upbringing that I realize was both bigoted and racist. Nonetheless, as a member of the Board of Directors for Citizens' Project, I've been a part of several group meetings with several folks from Focus on the Family. Before the first meeting we received a tour of their facilities: 900 employees handle 10,000 letters, 2,000 phone calls and 200 pleas for counseling support daily. With 10's of millions of dollars flowing through annually, this is not just a benign little church group; this is big business. Our first meeting with Focus was surprisingly cordial and it looked as though we in Citizen's Project might have something to gain from maintaining channels of communication with this group. Our second meeting, to discuss Colorado's Amendment 2, was considerably more acrimonious. At this meeting, I saw many of the symptoms of homophobia which I'd assumed served as a basic bond between members of Focus. So, it was a surprise when another board member of Citizens' Project, Richard Skorman, called one afternoon to tell me we'd been invited to attend one of Focus' day-long Community Impact Seminars. I agreed but with some ambivalence. Resigning myself to the fact that there was a great deal to be gained by attending, I decided to try to put aside my personal history and pre-existing attitudes and play the role of an objective and dispassionate reporter. However, as I drove into the overcrowded parking lot of the Pulpit Rock Church in Colorado Springs, it was clear that this crowd differed markedly from the folks I'd had breakfast with at Poor Richard's Espresso Bar. The crowd of 500 seemed to be made up of equal numbers of mostly middle-aged men and women whose most striking characteristic was the absence of any striking characteristic. Only a few wore suits but everyone's clothes were new, neat and freshly pressed. I must admit it was a relief when Richard finally appeared in his rumpled leather bomber jacket and pony tail and took a seat next to me. The presentations were all well organized and neatly divided into separate blocks. Participants were provided note taking outlines to follow along but we were assured that the entire text of all the presentations would also be provided at the end of the day. Topics to be covered included: the Biblical case for social and political involvement, the crisis of institutional authority, the separation of church and state, the crisis of cultural authority, understanding American culture, what can be done and how to do it. I think it is especially important for those of us who may eventually find we disagree with Focus to understand as clearly as possible what their position is. So I'll try and present their arguments as objectively as I can and reserve editorial comment until later. You may consider much of what follows as my Cliff Notes version of the six hours of presentations I observed. First the Biblical case for social and political involvement was presented. Scriptural referents for each of the following points were provided on multi-colored transparencies: a Christian view of love and compassion compels us; a Christian view of human beings assumes it; the effectiveness of evangelism depends on it; the Christian view of government requires it; and the character of God demands it. An interesting distinction was made between social service and social action; the former involves amelioration of individual symptoms while the latter is aimed at rectifying systemic ills. John, the first presenter, made it clear that social action was more important. A general discussion of the contemporary state of our nation (we have more adult bookstores than McDonald's) led to a search for who was to blame. Who could be charged with precipitating "this crisis of institutional authority"? Survey information concerning values and beliefs was used to show that educators, politicians and journalists had completely lost touch with the rest of the American population. Attitudes about such things as sex education, pornography, abortion and the importance of "strong religious values for political leaders" provided a clear contrast between these liberal "gatekeepers" and the rest of the population. Even the clergy of moderate Christian churches were identified as being culpable because of their reticence toward pronouncements of absolute truth and hesitancy to completely accept the Bible as the "inerrant word of God". (These institutional delinquents were referred to as "gatekeepers" so often; I wondered if they didn't really mean "gay"-tekeepers.) The next presentation contained a series of dramatic audio re-enactments of great moments in American history. John made a joke about how much trouble they had gone to get the original recordings from the Mayflower, but surprisingly few people sitting around Richard and me laughed. The objective of these dramatizations was clear; it was to show that America was and always had been a thoroughly Christian nation. The separation of church and state was revealed to be a very recent and completely unprecedented misapplication of a casual phrase Jefferson had once used in an obscure letter to a friend. Somewhere within this discussion John used the term "majoritarianism" (I wasn't sure, but I wondered if he was referring to democracy). The next point to be made was that current misrepresentations of history have caused us to lose touch with the "transcendent standards" which have historically sustained us as a nation. This crisis of cultural authority has set us adrift in a sea of relativism (which would be denounced shortly). Alan Bloom's, The Closing of the American Mind was provided as academic corroboration of our intellectual demise. William James, a famous psychologist (from the last century) observed that when most people think they are thinking, all they are really doing is rearranging their prejudices. This was mentioned at several points throughout the day so I assume it was pretty important. I "think" the implication was that without cultural (viz., Biblical) anchors, humans don't have the capacity to really think and all we're really doing is fooling ourselves by rearranging prejudices. John said the greatest mistake Christians can make is to assume that others think "Christianly". After a break for coffee and donuts, a new speaker, Greg, took over. A former USC philosophy professor, Greg set out to answer the question for the audience of "why your neighbors think like they do". Reminding us that "ideas drive culture", Greg divided Western civilization into four sets of ideas. What he would later label as "objectivism" was introduced as the philosophy of Aristotle, Christianity and 20 centuries of Western Culture. In this system of thought, God, the soul, values, other people, and the real world of science are all "known" and absolutely nothing need be accepted on "blind faith". Greg suggested our cultural demise began with the advent of empiricism in the 17th and 18th century. This new system of thought was described as maintaining that only science and other people could be known and that God, values and the soul were matters of blind faith. Noting that such a belief system is "inherently unstable", Greg moved us to empiricism's natural consequence: relativism (which Greg claimed undermined science itself). In the relativistic framework everything depended upon one's group. Absolutes were no longer "known"; our cultural decline was nearly complete. The final (and lowest) stage, however, was subjectivism. In this thought system the only thing that is knowable (and thus available as a criterion for moral decision making) is "my feelings". Greg then skillfully demonstrated the advantages of objectivism by dealing with a host of contemporary issues (e.g., love and sex, truth, reality and God). Tolerance was identified as "the new absolute" and then blamed for accelerating our demise. Greg did make an interesting observation that reality was "what you hit when you make a mistake" and therefore any system of ideas could endure the weight of only so many miscalculations before they collapsed. He suggested the collapse of subjectivism would complete the grand philosophical circle and bring us back to objectivism. Participants were left on their own for lunch. I needed a beer; Richard needed something more substantial; we went to the Hogan. Presentations resumed promptly at 1 pm. To warm us up, John provided a whimsical top ten list of things Christians could do while the rest of society was going to hell (which included going shopping, calling Dr. Dobson, seizing the oval office, sand-bagging your house and watching Christian TV, and calling Dr. Dobson back). "Seriously though folks, the key to the reclamation of society is your local church". "To be effective everyone needs to realize this is going to be a very long term project"; "there are no short cuts or quick fixes". "The church needs to be mobilized"; "lone rangers need not apply". "Congregations must be educated". (An extensive bibliography covering: abortion, adoption, AIDS, elder-care, child care, creation vs. evolution, pregnancy, divorce, education, euthanasia, homosexuality, homelessness, inner-cities, the media, national issues, pornography, prisons, religious liberty, rock music, runaway children, sex education, social and political involvement and substance abuse was provided in the appendix of one of the glossy notebooks provided participants). "Once educated, people need to be given something constructive to do" - (it was pointed out many times that rash action was almost always counter productive). The importance of connecting with other churches was stressed over and over and over again. The final presentation was designed to provide helpful hints on how to win arguments. Three possible ways were proposed: quoting authority, rallying the troops and persuasion. Quoting authority was dismissed as being ineffective because others don't accept scriptural reference as being sufficient proof any more (and most of the secular authorities had already been debunked). Rallying the troops was also discouraged due to its tendency to lead to escalation and scare off the people Focus would most like to attract (viz., moderate Christians). Pointing out that becoming parents was a strong inducement toward conservatism, the audience was encouraged to be patient but persistent in presenting "rational" Christian arguments to their friends and neighbors. Christians' own beliefs as reflected by their good works and cheerful spirit would naturally pull others toward them. Reflection and understanding were recommended as prerequisites to action. Using groups of like-minded individuals within committed congregation was offered as the best way to bring about desired social changes. Tom from the Rocky Mountain Family Council was in the anchor position. He told lawyer jokes and related examples of how a clever congregation was able to thwart the distribution of condoms at a high school in the Denver area (implying that since the AIDS virus is so tiny it can permeate latex, condom distribution is actually a plot to infect children). He also told how a television appearance by two parents showing a pornographic library book embarrassed a school system so badly, all books on the occult were withdrawn from the school library. He closed by soliciting volunteers to become Community Impact Contacts for their congregations. (I'm sure there were hundreds.) Overall this was a very impressive show. The speakers were articulate, clever and exuded friendliness. Their thirty-something, boyish charm oozed nice from every pore. The order of presentation, the multi-media, multi-colored, multi-presenter, audio-visually supported, well-choreographed messages were received appreciatively by all those around us. Two 45-minute question and answer periods allowed the audience of over 500 an opportunity to interact personally with the speakers (and also provided evidence these people were already convinced of everything that was to be said long before they arrived at the meeting). Personally, it was unnerving to feel so badly when surrounded by so much positive enthusiasm and apparent good will. But a whole day of being exactly 180 degrees out of sync with such a large audience left me frazzled and confused. I needed time to review and reflect and try and make sense of what had transpired. I know William James would point out that all I could do was rearrange my prejudices, but at least this might help me feel a little better (maybe I really am just a loathsome "subjectivist" after all). I thought I might start by trying to identify what I thought Focus' goals and objectives were and save analysis of their arguments til later. After a little reflection, it was obvious to me that their primary objective was to convince a majority of "Christians" to embrace their own evangelical perspective and once again accept a literal interpretation of New Testament Scriptures as the only guide for making social as well as personal moral decisions. Their preferred means to achieve this end also seemed pretty clear: to mobilize and energize like-minded Christians in local congregations to convince their more moderate (and tolerant) neighbors by "persuasive arguments". So what was wrong with all this? Well one thing that was wrong was that the arguments they'd constructed seemed to be untrue. Even though these were religious issues, I found myself feeling as though I'd been deceived. Was I the only one who saw this? Let me show you what I mean by discussing two of their pivotal arguments: the four ideas systems underlying culture and the evidence concerning the recency of the "mythical" separation of church and state. The presentation of ideas underlying culture was made by a former faculty member of the University of Southern California. I'm sure the assumption was that this guy really knew what he was talking about; USC is a well known and prestigious university (they usually have winning football teams and even occasionally play in the Rose Bowl). Admittedly, no one could be expected to completely cover the history of western philosophy in an hour without a great deal of simplification, but my expectation was that fair treatment would be given to major perspectives. I wondered if Greg had done this. I also wanted to know what had been left out of his presentation and if its omission might have created this apparent dichotomy between objectivism and an eventual demise to absolute subjectivism. What I found from looking through a few old philosophy texts and other references is that Greg's entire presentation was a classic example of the creation of a faulty dilemma through omission, exaggeration and gross oversimplification. There is no single dimension of philosophical development. The faulty dilemma of strict adherence to Biblical standards or abandonment of any external standards for making ethical decisions is an artifact of oversimplification. Even if we accept the general categories of objectivism and subjectivism, the contrasts Greg made are very misleading. The greatest distinction between these approaches are the processes they employ rather than their particular claims of knowledge. Objectivism is any of several views which stress objective and external reality, especially as distinguished from subjective experience or appearance. Perhaps the most well known objectivist philosophy is the Formalism of Immanuel Kant, an 18th century German philosopher. Kant suggested there is a pre-existing (a priori) right and wrong which can be discovered by humankind. He suggested the "categorical imperative" could be used to discern these external moral laws. His formula (at least in part) was "Act only on that maxim whereby thou canst at the same time will it should become a universal law." Kant's formalism is not incompatible with empiricism; in fact, it depends on a reasoned consideration of objective evidence to define universal or absolute truth. It seems as though the categorical imperative would preclude the literal adoption of the whole Bible as "universal law". Greg hadn't mentioned Kant. The form of objectivism presented as being the only alternative to eventual absolute subjectivism was much closer to evangelical "scholasticism". Scholasticism was a philosophical movement dominant in Western Christian civilization from the 9th until the 17th century. It combined a fixed religious dogma with the mystical and intuitional tradition of patristic philosophy. It attempted to find and document natural evidence consistent with pre-existing religious assumptions. Human reason was not employed to discover truth but to explore, explicate, and defend truths that were already known. These "truths" themselves were not subject to scrutiny, doubt or inquiry (this would have been "heresy"). Historically speaking, this approach formed the basis for feudalism, canon law and led western civilization into what we refer to as "the dark ages". The implications of a renewal of this kind of non-empirical, pseudo-rational paradigm are serious. As Bertrand Russell observed in 1950 " ...various forms of madness - communism, Naziism, Japanese imperialism - are the natural result of the impact of science on nations with a strong pre-scientific culture." Scientific Creationism (one of today's great oxymorons) is another example of where this kind of thinking leads. Greg hadn't mentioned "scholasticism" as an example of how incorrect idea systems are only able to bear so much weight before they collapse. In fact, Greg hadn't mentioned "scholasticism" (or evangelism) at all. Let's now look at the other half of Greg's false dichotomy between philosophies; the empirical group. Empiricism is the practice of relying upon observed evidence and experimentation to discover principles. Its application to the natural sciences is often credited with bringing us out of "the dark ages". The scientific method is "the empirical method". One of the earliest forms of empiricism was positivism. The positivist perspective was that theology and metaphysics physics were imperfect modes of learning about the world. Positive knowledge could only be based on the observation of natural phenomena and their properties and relations discovered and verified through empirical methods. Relativism is a view that knowledge is relative to the limited nature of the mind and that the conditions of knowing anything (especially ethical truths) depend upon individuals' assumptions. (Actually, Albert Einstein's theory of relativity in physics contains a very similar notion.) Subjectivism suggests that knowledge is limited to conscious states and elements in experience (i.e., awareness). As Greg pointed out, this perspective does suggest that individual feelings of pleasure, pride or fulfillment ought to be criteria for appraising the moral value of alternative choices. Subjectivism, as far as I could ascertain, however, is not the same as hedonism and does not suggest that only one's own pleasure ought to be considered. The assertion that relativism and subjectivism were the only or even the most prevalent alternatives to objectivism turns out to be untrue. Several other philosophical perspectives seem to be more tenable and also more widely representative of contemporary thinkers. Two of these which seem very compatible with empirical methods warrant comment: contextualism and utilitarianism. Contextualism suggests that absolute moral laws do not exist but, in contrast to relativism, would not leave questions of right and wrong entirely to the group. Contextualism suggests that every ethical decision is unique; therefore all factors must be weighed by those involved in the problem before a decision is made. As Alfred North Whitehead observed: "the simple minded use of the notion 'right or wrong' is one of the chief obstacles to the progress of understanding". Similarly, Dietrich Bonhoeffer suggested: "Principles are only tools in God's hands soon to be thrown away as unserviceable". Both these views reflect contextualist perspectives. Utilitarianism is another ethical perspective which seems to influence political and social choices more strongly than subjectivism. Utilitarianism suggests "the useful" is "the good" and choices should be evaluated in terms of their consequences. For example, the question of the legalization of abortion should depend on the social consequences of the alternatives rather than a retrospective search for divine guidance. Utilitarianism maintains that moral decisions are those that secure "the greatest possible good for the most people". What is "good"? There could be considerable debate about this (and as contextualists suggests there should be) but "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" seems like a good place to start. But wait, this "pursuit of happiness" stuff makes it sound like "subjectivism" might have even influenced our founding fathers, (remember those paragons of fundamentalism we spent an hour listening to in order to dispel the "mythical" separation of church and state). I must admit that although the dramatic readings were very well done, I couldn't help wondering how representative they were of the true feelings of those who framed our Constitution. I turned to one of my favorite books, George Seldes', The Great Quotations. Many passages struck me as being both relevant and in direct contradiction to what John had presented. I've grouped these into several categories. On the issue of personal beliefs I found interesting entries by Ethan Allen, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. In the Preface to Reason the Only Oracle of Man, Ethan Allen wrote: " I have generally been denominated a Deist, the reality of which I have never disputed, being conscious I am no Christian, except mere baptism makes me one". Ben Franklin's glib comments reflect such a casual irreverence, its hard to picture him as a fervent fundamentalist: "Lighthouses are more helpful than churches"; "I think vital religion has always suffered when orthodoxy is more regarded than virtue." Thomas Jefferson seemed somewhat vexed when the question of his personal religion was even raised: "I never told my own religion, nor scrutinized that of another. I never attempted to make a convert, nor wished to change another's creed. I have ever judged of others' religion by their lives.. for it is from our lives and not from our words, that our religion must be read". Perhaps the most elegant expression of the religious mood of the time was reflected by Thomas Paine in The Age of Reason, (often cited as the intellectual foundation of the American Revolution): "I believe in one God, and no more; and I hope for happiness beyond this life... I believe in the equality of man; and I believe that religious duties consist in doing justice, loving mercy, and endeavoring to make our fellow creatures happy (more of that nasty subjectivism?)... I do not believe in the creed professed by the Jewish church, by the Roman church, by the Greek church, by the Turkish church, by the Protestant church, nor by any church I know of. My mind is my own church..." I also found citations relevant to John's claims that the United States was really founded as a "Christian nation". In his autobiography, Thomas Jefferson makes specific mention of an incident which occurred during the framing of the Virginia Act for Religious Freedom in 1786: "Where the preamble declares, that coercion is a departure from the plan of the holy author of our religion, an amendment was proposed by inserting the words 'Jesus Christ', so that it should read 'a departure from the plan of Jesus Christ, the holy author of our religion;' the insertion was rejected by a great majority, in proof that they meant to comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and the Mohammedan, the Hindoo and the Infidel of every denomination". Similarly, in the treaty ending hostilities between the United States and Tripoli, President John Adams begins Article 11 with these words: "As the Government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion, as it has itself no character of enmity against the law, religion or tranquillity of the Musselmen (Muslims)...". The primary point Focus tried to establish was that the separation of church and state was a myth created spontaneously after WWII by some misguided federal judge. I found many entries decrying the potential danger of co-mingling the affairs of church and state. In his Discertation on Canon and Feudal Law in 1765, John Adams provides a historical assessment of the consequences of allowing religious beliefs to become law (a direct result of scholasticism): "All these opinions they (the clergy) were enabled to spread and rivet among the people by reducing their minds to a state of sordid ignorance and staring timidity, and by infusing into them a religious horror of letters and knowledge (perhaps similar to Focus' attack on educators and journalists?). Thus was human nature chained fast for ages in a cruel, shameful, and deplorable servitude to him (the Pope) and his subordinate tyrants...". In his first Inaugural Address in 1801, Thomas Jefferson appears to have been equally contemptuous of pre-existing conspiracies between religions and governments: "And let us reflect that having banished from our land that religious intolerance under which mankind so long bled and suffered, we have yet gained little if we countenance a political intolerance as despotic, as wicked, and capable of as bitter and bloody persecutions". I know the words "separation of church and state" do not appear verbatim in any of the forgoing, but the general intentions seem pretty clear. One final impression left by the "voices from the past" presentation was that our founding fathers unanimously embraced the scriptures as the inerrant and undiluted word of God. This also turns out to be a rather untenable claim. Noting that the Bible had been altered throughout history to meet the needs and machinations of the hated Roman Church, Thomas Paine had many unkind words to say about the scriptures. Here are just a few: "Whenever we read the obscene stories, the voluptuous debaucheries, the cruel and tortuous executions, the unrelenting vindictiveness, with which the Bible is filled, it would be more consistent that we call it the word of a demon than the word of God. It is a history of wickedness that has served to corrupt and brutalize mankind". Thomas Jefferson, having studied many of the earliest texts in their original languages, went even further. Decrying the corruption of the New Testament by centuries of self-serving papists and early Christians, he deleted major portions and retranslated others to produce what has come to be known as The Jefferson Bible. (It has recently been republished by Beacon Press and is available at most local bookstores other than those owned by Focus.) What's been left out? Try finding any account of the resurrection or ascension. I hasten to add that none of the forgoing "proves" the intentions of the framers of our Constitution any more than did John's selection of quotations. These words do, however, show there's reason to suspect the representativeness of the recorded voices. To summarize briefly, Focus is a virulent form of neo-scholasticism. Its disciples assume the word of God is revealed, literally and unequivocally, by evangelical interpretations of the scriptures of the New Testament of the Bible. Although largely unstated, I believe their goal is to convince all Americans to accept and embrace these beliefs to the exclusion of all others as a condition of citizenship. Their initial strategy appears to be to convince the majority of Americans who "claim" to be Christians but do not yet accept the absolute truth of Jesus Christ to abandon tolerance and join Focus. The way they plan to do this is through "logical persuasion" (although their own concept of truth requires only Biblical correspondence rather than empirical support or objective evidence). They will exaggerate, oversimplify and misrepresent information to support their claims. Their basic argument goes something like this: The world is in a terrible state. Institutional authorities (i.e. educators, journalists, politicians and even some clergy) are directly to blame (although homosexuals, communists, atheists, secular humanists and other liberals are especially culpable). The separation of church and state is a cruel and recent hoax. Relativism and subjectivism, the only philosophical progeny of empiricism create the illusion of reason and thought but have led to our demise. A return to "Objectivism" as reflected by Aristotle, (true) Christianity and twenty centuries of Western Culture is our only choice (salvation). Direct persuasion through education, involvement, coordination and community activism (impact) is the best way for us to change the course of history and reclaim America. If the forgoing is anywhere close to being true, it begs the question of what can reasonable and tolerant people of good faith do to counter this threat to our communal freedoms. Three options occur to me: ignore them, rebuke them, or engage them. Although I believe that if left alone, this movement will eventually self-destruct, Focus has already grown to such proportions that it is likely to seriously harm millions of others before it collapses under the weight of its internal inconsistencies. Do we really want to allow Focus to usher in another Dark Ages? Although their arguments are internally inconsistent and fundamentally illogical and their evidence is so far below commonly accepted standards of truth, it has no claim to call itself "research", Focus has learned to produce packages of information sufficiently persuasive to win many converts. Unfortunately, far too many of us have learned to let others do our thinking for us. The facile acceptance of simple solutions offered by smiling, friendly faces may be preferred to reflective examination and eventual understanding of the complex social problems that plague us. All that is needed for religious tyranny to gain hold is for people who love liberty to look the other way. Focus cannot be ignored. The next option is to rebuke them; to expose their conspiracy and directly reveal their treachery to those they intend to subvert. Such a strategy might easily be overdone. Although until recently, I would have preferred this approach, I've changed my mind (rearranged my prejudices). Most of the people at Focus are absolutely sincere in their beliefs. This seems to be especially true of the second-generation, thirty-something cadre below the vice presidential level who provide the public face for Focus. Their message is largely one of love and compassion and they are committed to actually doing good deeds to reflect their faith ("witnessing"). Note, however, that adherence to neo-scholasticism relieves them of responsibility for unintended negative social consequences of their good intentions and allows them to ignore evidence inconsistent with their Biblical assumptions. By selecting evidence on only one side of any argument, they create the appearance of internal consistency and logic. But as Erich Fromm pointed out "Paranoid thinking is often characterized by the fact that it can be completely logical yet lack any guidance by concern of concrete inquiry into reality; in other words, such logic does not exclude madness." Their intentional misrepresentation of groups they see opposing their views (e.g., homosexuals and secular humanists) is not seen by them as being unethical. A booklet produced by Focus entitled "The Homosexual Agenda" overflows with homophobic venom and slanderous distortions. Another example is contained in the book, Children at Risk, by Dr Dobson and Gary Bauer. In response to a question about secular humanism the following are included in a list of 25 items which make up "the family agenda of the left": 11. Expand the power of government and its bureaucracies to control every vestige of private life... 12. Increase the tax burden on families, forcing women into the work force and their children into childcare facilities... 14. Repeal all laws relating to obscenity, and even child pornography... 24. Fight tooth and nail to retain the right to abortion on demand - up to the moment of birth - for any reason whatsoever..." Apparently it doesn't matter that these statements are untrue or at least gross exaggerations, the only relevant thing about information is the degree to which it is consistent with their pre-existing beliefs (viz., "truth") about humanists. Rejecting empirical definitions of truth as well as academic standards of evidence, allows Dr Dobson and the rest of the folks at Focus to construct and believe in arguments based entirely on anecdotes and isolated incidents. Ignorance and evil are not necessarily the same; we need to recognize that an evangelical commitment to neo-scholasticism has left those on the religious right both intellectually handicapped and tolerance impaired. Another reason for avoiding a strategy of direct vilification is that even if these were "bad" people, it would be almost impossible to convince anyone else of the danger. In public, Focus folks are the epitome of cordial, concerned and responsible citizens. Any attempt at character assassination would almost certainly backfire and destroy the credibility of their accusers. For Focus the middle ground is the high ground and they've expended a great deal of effort to purge their organization of "loose canons", "lone rangers" and "Bible thumpers". Their means are entirely above board and they are committed to gradual and (apparently) "reasonable" approaches to "positive" societal change. So we are left with engagement as the strategy of last resort. As a result of the seminar I attended in November, 500 evangelical canaries have been set loose in Colorado Springs. They all have the evangelical words and music as outlined above. They will be approaching others to win converts. They are committed, confident, well-equipped and well-connected. But they are still only trained canaries; they're unlikely to be able to sing a song they've not been taught. Sincere questions about the sources and logical consequences of their beliefs may bring their Biblical bias out into the open. In some cases, however, we may even find ourselves needing to agree with them: more comprehensive and inclusive sex education programs may be better than those that exclude discussions of the abstinence option; there are books that are not suitable for elementary school libraries; and to pretend that education is "value-free" seems an exercise in futility. We must acknowledge their social contributions and good works but also vigorously resist those initiatives which threaten the freedoms of members of our community. We need to inform one another of effective counter-arguments or obviously missing or misrepresented aspects of their misguided pronouncements. We need to learn about their plans and activities and insist on a high level of integrity by setting an example of openness and honesty. An incident near the end of my day with Focus provides a sobering example of what we may be dealing with. In his closing remarks, John said something like: "We must ensure that no individual, regardless of their sexual orientation is denied their basic rights under the Constitution, but we must also insure that homosexuality does not become the basis for special rights or protected status." This statement was met with thunderous applause from the audience but John quickly reminded those present that if they cheered for the second part they also must applaud the initial statement. He repeated "No one must ever be denied their Constitutional rights because of their sexual orientation"; there was a polite smattering of clapping. John went on but I was lost in thought. Why had John made them applaud that statement? Did he really believe it was true? Perhaps, but Constitutional rights for the practice of homosexuality seemed inconsistent with the beliefs I'd heard from many others on the religious right (including Focus). Some of these people have even expressed the view that homosexuality is against God's law and thus a volitional (i.e., willful) wrong. If homosexuality had a biological basis (as most of the scientific evidence suggests) then God would be responsible for creating sin which would truly be "unthinkable" in a scholastic framework. Perhaps John was simply a well-informed exception. I think not; Focus allows few exceptions; orthodoxy must be uniform. Perhaps this was just another example of their commitment to employ persuasive tactics. I suspect John knew that many of the moderate Christian neighbors who will ask about the seminar would not accept the incarceration (or execution) of gays as called for by "high octane" religious radicals. John's a clever man; he knows that such proposals would serve to weaken the credibility of Focus and its supporters... at least for the time being.